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Posts Tagged ‘Are burning candles bad for you?’

As a nutritionist with a holistic approach to medicine, I was disturbed to awake a couple weeks ago unable to swallow.

My throat was so dry, I was dizzy, I had a cough… it was the first time in couple of years that the thought of grabbing an OTC pain reliever passed through my mind.

“What did I eat/drink that was so bad?”

“I am not supposed to get sick!”

“Have I really been that stressed and exhausted?”

Unfortunately, although the throat got better enough for me to swallow, my healthy glow did not return to me regardless of the amount of juice I guzzled. In fact, each day I felt much better being out and about, only to be disappointed to find that I woke up somewhere along the lines of where I had started. Talk about a blow to my nutritional confidence. I had to admit that my immunity was not invincible.

First thought… the A/C. Being that it is steamy hot in Dallas, Texas, sleeping without the air conditioning (albeit unnatural) is like sleeping on a heating pad. Not so comfy. Not so peaceful. But… although the A/C probably was not helping the matter, it did not really make sense that I would have just become suddenly sick now. At the end of summer.

Second thoughts… dust, and/or mold… Dust was definitely an issue but not the culprit.

Can you guess what the culprit was?

CANDLES!

When I first moved to Dallas, alone, and living in a new place, I developed a relationship with candles. There is something so vibrant, peaceful, and friendly about a dancing flame that it became a welcome companion in the evening. On a budget, and not fully able to decorate a new place, candles became my inexpensive way to add color to a vacant room, in addition to that “home baked” scent in the kitchen that I did not bake in. Suffice to say, I did not think in great depth about my candles and their health correlation.

Fast forward.

New place. Spending wisely. The apartment complex adds insolation to keep the hot Dallas heat from increasing room temperatures and slowly my throat becomes noticeably drier at night (which is not an unusual occurence with A/C). But then wham! Sick. Pain. Can’t get past it.

As it turns out a specific “fancy,” sweet-smelling gifted candle (something I would not have purchased on my budget) had been lit unbeknownst to us, and burned in the apartment a few days prior. Not pinpointing the pricey candle as a source of pollution, we continued to burn it, even after I became sick. When the vent was removed from the air conditioning unit, the complex was astonished to find it completely black. I could only imagine what my poor little lungs were thinking breathing in that stuff.

So I then got to thinking: How hazardous are candles to our health? What exactly am I burning? And regardless of ingredients, should we really be lighting these things when there is not sufficient circulation?

I had questions. I got answers.

Most common Ingredients: Paraffin, followed by different variations of “beeswax, soy wax, palm wax, gels, and other synthetic waxes” (Candles.org). But The National Candle Association DOES NOT REQUIRE candle ingredients be labeled.

When a candle burns, what are we breathing in? “The flame’s heat vaporizes the liquid wax to produce water vapor and carbon dioxide.” According to the National Candle Association, this “soot” is not equivalent to the toxins formed by burning gasoline, fuel, and coal (Um, Thank goodness for that! ha!) but rather the same as burning cooking oil, and heating up something in the toaster. Hm… so burning toast is the same as burning Paraffin? Interesting… because I highly, highly doubt we use these kitchen appliances as often and as long as we breath in candle smoke.

Excerpt from UK online Magazine.

“When paraffin wax is burnt, it has been shown to produce chemicals such as
benzene and toluene.Dr Andy Beeby, chemistry expert from Durham University, says that these twochemicals should be avoided wherever possible. He says: ‘Benzene and tolueneare solvents that are used industrially to make glue and gloss paint.

‘When people sniff glue, it is solvents like this that are making them high. Benzene
particularly is a known carcinogen — i.e. it has been proven to cause cancer.

It’s not a substance that I would ever expose myself to in the lab.” –DailyMail.co.uk

Lovely.
While candles can add luxury to any and every setting, it is important to think about what you could be exposing yourself and others to. Candle soot and smoke can unknowingly aggravate bronchioles, contributing to asthma and pulmonary exacerbations, as well as “mysterious” lung and throat irritations like I experienced. Additionally, they can create inflammation and trigger allergies.
While I am certainly not going to completely give my glamorous companions the cold shoulder, I have not lit a candle since I learned of its contribution to my “sickness.” And really, did you know that the very next day, after having slept without a lit candle during the evening, I was back to an almost normal lung function, and I could swallow (we also changed the smokey black vent out).
It is interesting what you learn when you are forced to analyze your everyday habits, eh?
That being said, I am going to be more cautious when purchasing candles, and when and where I light them. Lighting candles in an isolated area, especially small apartments with little circulation is like slow suffocation.
Take into account what kind of candles you are buying. Paraffin candles are certainly the most common and most dangerous candles to buy because paraffin is a cheap ” ‘bottom of the barrel’ final byproduct in the petroleum refining chain…even after asphalt is extracted. Petroleum sludge, if you will,” says environmental advocate, blogger and mother.
Still want to light candles? Check out I Count For My Earth for a more adequate response on candle burning.
Do you love candles like me?
Did you know this about candles? If so… did you switch up your style? Start purchasing something different, or limiting how often you “light up”? Have you ever gotten sick from candle soot? Think this article is crazy?

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