Please don't paint her toes
<http://www.enviroblog.org/2009/03/please-dont-paint-her-toes.html>http://www.enviroblog.org/2009/03/please-dont-paint-her-toes.html
 


By Lisa Frack
March 31, 2009

Last week I took my kids for a haircut. We go to a terrific woman in 
our neighborhood who runs a hair salon out of her house, and she's 
cut my kids hair since their very first cut. She's warm, patient and 
loves my kids. While my 6-year-old son was squirming in her chair, 
she offered to have her daughter paint my 3-year old's toenails.

3399398275_d9b2d48d70.jpg


Since I'm hardly a fan of 
<http://safecosmetics.live2.radicaldesigns.org/article.php?id=224>carcinogenic 
ingredients and am unsure which nail polishes contain them and which 
have removed them, I said no.

Saying "no" can be hard.
Saying no, of course, is far easier said than done. Oh, I can say no 
to my 3-year-old (do it all the time), but I also had to say no to 
this super nice woman who made a generous offer to please my 
daughter. Slightly trickier, right?

So I explained to my crying daughter that we can't paint her toe 
nails because the polish might have toxic ingredients that "aren't 
healthy for her body" (my kids hear this all too often). All said, of 
course, in front of our friendly hairdresser whose judgment I was 
insulting. Ugh.

How it should be.
What was running through my mind during this noisy, teary, confusing 
conversation was how great it would be if I could have said,
Sure, Ana, that sounds fun. You're really nice to offer. Georgia, 
would you like to have your toenails painted?

But I couldn't. And I won't until I can be confident that the 
personal care products being sold in this country are safe. Safe for 
me, super safe for my growing kids. But there's no way to be sure, 
because 
<http://safecosmetics.live2.radicaldesigns.org/article.php?list=type&type=30>our
 
laws are 
far<http://safecosmetics.live2.radicaldesigns.org/article.php?list=type&type=30>
 
too weak.

What can you do?
The Campaign for Safe Cosmetics offers this practical advice:
Look for less-toxic brands and formulations of nail polishes and 
treatments in <http://www.cosmeticsdatabase.com>Skin Deep, and 
practice BYOP -- bring your own polish -- on salon visits. Try 
buffing nails instead of lacquering, skip the mani and just get a 
pedi, limit polish use by children and pregnant women and always 
apply and remove polish in a well-ventilated area.

And be sure to read our Enviroblog post, 
"<http://www.enviroblog.org/2008/05/making-makeup-safe-for-kids.html>Making 
Makeup Safe for Kids." It covers nailpolish and more.

Be safe out there. There's a lot of unknowns.

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