Synthetic Fabrics
“What Your Clothes Are Saying: The Vibrational Frequencies of Fabric”
Every fabric holds a frequency — some nourish, others disrupt. This article explores how natural fibers like cotton and linen emit life-supporting energy, while synthetics like polyester and nylon carry lower, potentially draining vibrations. At Be ing, we believe what touches the skin should be in sacred conversation with the body — supporting fertility, vitality, and connection with Source.
Read Article →"Study Reveals 'Forever Chemicals' Can Penetrate Skin, Heightening Health Concerns"
Recent research from the University of Birmingham demonstrates that per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), commonly known as 'forever chemicals,' can be absorbed through human skin, providing a direct pathway into the bloodstream. These persistent chemicals, found in everyday items, have been linked to serious health issues, including cancer, liver damage, and developmental problems. The study challenges previous assumptions about PFAS exposure routes and underscores the need for increased awareness and regulation of these ubiquitous substances.
Read Article →"Antimony in Polyester: The Hidden Toxin in Synthetic Clothing"
Dr. John Douillard's LifeSpa article reveals how antimony, a toxic element used in polyester production, can leach into the body through skin contact, potentially causing health issues such as skin irritation and organ damage. This insight underscores the importance of choosing natural fibers to protect our health and well-being.
Read Article →Toxic Textiles
“Wearing Harm: Study Shows Toxic Textile Chemicals Can Penetrate Skin”
A groundbreaking study confirms that harmful substances like benzothiazole — commonly found in synthetic clothing — can pass through the skin and into the body. For Be ing, this underscores the sacred responsibility of what touches the skin during fertility, pregnancy, and postpartum: fabric is not fashion, it is frequency.
Read Article →"Toxic Textiles: How Microplastics Enter the Body Through Skin"
This study reveals that microplastics from synthetic fabrics can be absorbed into the bloodstream through our skin — raising urgent questions for women preparing to conceive or carry life, and affirming the need for pure, protective materials during the most sacred seasons of the body.
Read Article →“Toxic Threads: Unveiling Harmful Chemicals in Everyday FashionThe Guardian”
Investigating the presence of hazardous substances like PFAS and BPA in clothing, this article exposes potential health risks associated with common apparel choices.
Read Article →Plastic Particles
“Plastic Particles Themselves Disrupt Hormones, Not Just Their Chemicals”
Rutgers scientists reveal that the plastic particles themselves—not just the additives—can alter sex hormone production, impacting fertility and metabolism even through inhalation. A deeper call to purify our environments, inside and out.
Read Article →“Plastics and Endocrine Disruptors: A Global Health Concern”
The Endocrine Society's report highlights how plastics leach hazardous endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs), posing significant risks to human health worldwide.
Read Article →"Microplastics and Reproduction: Insights from the C. elegans Model"
This study explores how plastic particles disrupt reproductive health at the cellular level, using a model organism to reveal mechanisms of toxicity. It adds scientific depth to our understanding, showing that even at the most basic biological layers, plastic exposure can interfere with fertility — reinforcing the call to protect the womb with clean, intentional materials.
Read Article →Microplastics + Growing Life
“Microplastics Found in the Placenta: New Warnings for Pregnancy Health”
This emerging research confirms the presence of microplastics in human placentas, deepening concern about their potential impact on fertility, fetal development, and maternal health — a clear call to return to clean, conscious materials during conception and pregnancy.
Read Article →“Microplastics in the Womb: Found in Placenta and Breast Milk”
Earth Day reports the alarming discovery of microplastics in the placenta and breast milk — evidence that plastic pollution reaches even the earliest, most sacred moments of life. A call to protect the womb, the child, and the future.
Read Article →“The Hidden Dangers of Microplastics: How They Disrupt Hormones and Menstrual Cycles”
This article reveals how microplastics interfere with women’s hormonal health, contributing to menstrual imbalances and fertility struggles — a powerful reminder that the materials we wear matter deeply, especially for those preparing to conceive.
Read Article →Microplastics + Fertility
“Microplastics and Reproductive Health: Uncovering Hidden Threats to Fertility”
This scientific review reveals how micro- and nanoplastics contribute to oxidative stress, inflammation, and cellular damage, disrupting hormone signaling and impairing fertility across species. These findings deepen concern about environmental exposures during the reproductive window and affirm the importance of reducing plastic contact for those preparing to conceive.
Read Article →"Microplastics and Nanoplastics: Emerging Threats to Female Fertility and Offspring Health"
Microplastics can infiltrate the body through ingestion, inhalation, and skin contact, potentially leading to reproductive harm and cross-generational effects—calling us back to purity, presence, and protection in what we wear and consume.
Read Article →"Microplastics' Impact on Female Reproductive Health: A Comprehensive Review"
This review examines how microplastics and nanoplastics adversely affect female fertility, highlighting their role in ovarian dysfunction, hormonal imbalances, and potential risks to fetal development,
Read Article →Microplastics + Reproduction
"Unveiling the Impact of Plastic-Derived Endocrine Disruptors on Reproductive Health"
This editorial introduces a collection of research exploring how endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) from plastics adversely affect reproduction, fertility, and development, emphasizing the urgent need for safer alternatives to protect human health.
"Global Health Alert: Endocrine-Disrupting Chemicals in Everyday Products"
Recent scientific findings reveal that daily exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) in plastics, pesticides, and other common sources may be linked to rising rates of infertility, diabetes, immune deficiencies, and other serious health conditions worldwide.
Read Article →Endocrine + Reproduction
“Endocrine Disruptors and Reproductive Health: Unveiling the Global Impact”
This comprehensive review examines how endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs), both natural and synthetic, interfere with neuroendocrine pathways, leading to reproductive disorders across species and posing significant global health challenges.
Read Article →“Endocrine Disruption from Microplastics: A Silent Threat to Fertility”
This scientific review reveals how microplastics and nanoplastics can carry hormone-disrupting chemicals that interfere with reproductive function — urging a return to purity and intentionality in the materials we invite near our wombs.
Read Article →“Plastic-Derived Endocrine Disruptors: How Exposure at Critical Life Stages Impacts Fertility and Development”
This study unpacks how endocrine-disrupting compounds leach from plastics and interfere with hormonal signaling—especially during pregnancy, puberty, and other sensitive windows—amplifying risks to reproductive and developmental health across generations.
Read Article →Phthalates + BPA
“Phthalates: The Ubiquitous Chemicals Impacting Pregnancy and Development”
This resource explores how phthalates — common in plastics and personal care products — pose risks to reproductive health, emphasizing the importance of minimizing exposure during conception and pregnancy to safeguard maternal and child well-being.
Read Article →"Phthalates and BPA: Plastic’s Deepening Toll on Fertility and Hormonal Health"
Earth Day reveals how hormone-disrupting chemicals like phthalates and BPA—found in everyday plastics—are linked to infertility, miscarriage, and endocrine imbalance in both women and men. A quiet crisis, urging us to reclaim purity in the spaces, products, and rituals that surround conception.
Read Article →