Ahimsa is core tenet of Jainism, Buddhism, Hinduism, and most religions.
Published in Jain Spirit in 2002, this essay is about understanding the downstream impacts of our water usage at home and how to minimize them using Jainism principles. Applies to most spiritual traditions, especially Hinduism and Buddhism.
Essay appears even more relevant today as places like India use more and more household chemicals and pesticides (even those deemed too toxic and banned in the west).
Our
interactions today have become less physical and observable. Faceless people
and invisible processes send water to our tap without us being able to identify
the source of our water. Our garbage and sewage also disappear from our home
without us knowing where and how they end up. This makes it hard for us to
determine the himsa (violence), if any, we cause to others, especially
the animals and plants who have no voice. However, since we Jains are still
responsible for any violence we cause, it is important, to identify our himsa
and reduce it.
The
focus of this essay is on one type of violence we do indirectly on other
groups. Individually our himsa is diffused and therefore subtle;
collectively it leads to the vast devastation and despair that we have learned
to ignore. To start on common ground, i repeat my definition from my previous
essay: Preventing a living group from flourishing is himsa.
When my
son started crawling, we noticed all the chemicals we stocked in our home.
Adults generally know of the dangers of these chemicals and thus don’t drink
them. They often wear gloves while using them and even avoid breathing them.
But my son was not so knowledgeable and so we began to ‘child-proof’ our house.
That lead me to think: if these chemicals were bad for him, weren’t they bad
for all the life-forms that are exposed to them?
I
reflected on the life that lives downstream. Our drains lead to rivers, lakes,
and seas. Do the millions of big and small creatures living there appreciate a
dose of drain-cleaner in the water they live in, that they breathe? How can
they avoid these poisons (if they become aware of them)? Can they ‘child-proof’
their entire environment?
My thoughts led back to myself: would i notice if the
cleaner clearly labeled ‘Poison’ killed some creatures in the San Francisco
bay? Would i notice if all my detergents made the waters toxic and slowly
squeezed the life out of the bay? Obviously, my dishwashing detergent alone
would not cause much harm, but if a million homes dumped a scoop of it every
night into the bay, it would easily create a toxic nightmare.
Determined
to find out what i was using and what my impacts are, i studied which cleaners
i used, what they contained, what the effects were. I could not believe how
much himsa i was participating in: both in the disposal and the
manufacture.
Due to
dilution, mixing, and long-term nature, there is not much research done on the
impact of our cleaners on downstream life. In fact, little is known about the
impact on chemicals on us! Fewer than 1,000 chemicals (out of over 50,000 now
in manufacture) have been tested for immediate acute effects, only about 500
have been tested for their ability to cause cancer, birth defects or genetic
changes. Chemicals once thought safe are not: household chemicals can cause
headaches, depression, insomnia and flu-like symptoms. There is evidence that
many chemicals in our homes are poisonous, carcinogenic, ozone-depleting, and
not natural to any ecosystem. This includes detergents, bleaches, synthetic fragrances,
artificial dyes, and aerosol propellants. Other chemicals easily found around
the home include ammonia, methylene chloride, naphthalene, nitrobenzene,
perchloroethylene, sodium hypochlorite, trichloroethane, trichloroethylene, and
xylene. Even without a a Ph.D. in chemistry and biology, i was sufficiently
alarmed to take the warning labels stating “Poison” and “Hazard” very
seriously.
While
using (and thus disposing) of these products is harmful, the manufacture may be
even more so. While ‘not tested on animals’ is the label in fashion on personal
products, the grim reality is that it is really true. We often do not test to
see what effect manufacturing chemicals has on life – we just do it. We
assume any impact is negligible until proven otherwise after which we consider
it a necessary sacrifice. Attending a two-day seminar on the environmental
impact of the chemical industry organized by the manufacturers themselves
provided the data that my heart already knew: the manufacture of chemicals is a
hugely poisonous, and thus violent, affair.
Abandoning
this line of research i started what i consider a more Jain approach to
research: what were my needs and how could i meet them using the minimum
amounts of the gentlest cleaners – causing the least amount of himsa.
This research was more fruitful and led to an incredible conclusion: most of my
violence was totally unnecessary.
I want
to share my findings on how to reduce our himsa caused by our cleaning
rituals: personal, laundry, and household. Let us start by learning from the
wisdom of our ancestors, which is still valid. The people who built the
Ranakpur and Abu temples were clean, wore clean clothes and kept their homes
clean. We could learn from their habits and ask ourselves as to why we have
moved away from simple cleaners such as water, vinegar, lemon, and baking soda.
The
first answer is economics and advertising. If water works better than 50% of
the glass cleaners – according to Consumer Reports – in the market,
who is going to profit from it? If a spoonful of vinegar added to that water
makes it among the best cleaning substance, will you see an ad for it? We start
thinking that the simple and effective solutions are old-fashioned, and soon we
forget them completely.
The second answer is that we have created very abrasive
and toxic cleaners only recently. People washing clothes and dishes with their
hands will not tolerate chemicals that harm them. People wearing gloves (a
recent practice) do not mind harsher detergents. People using washing machines
and dishwashers want their cleaners to be as strong as possible. Actually since
these machines cannot give direct attention to stains they require more
abrasive substances.
A third
answer is that detergents were developed especially to clean synthetic fibers,
and are unnecessary for natural fibers such as cotton, linen, silk, and wool.
Similarly, to keep fluorescent and other synthetic dyes looking bright we have
to use detergents.
So how
do we reduce our violent cleaning behavior with something gentle? We need to do
three steps: reduce, substitute, and change.
The
first step is Reduce. We can reduce the dosage of all our cleaners. From
our soaps and shampoos to our laundry and dishwashing detergents. I cut down
quantities by half and everything came out fine. Of course some stains needed
direct treatment but the extra manual step was worth reducing my himsa by half.
I reduced my consumption of dishwashing detergents by much more than half,
especially when i found out that there is a measurable residue that has been
known to affect young children.
The
next step is to Substitute. My babies were bathed in besan
(chick-pea flour) paste, an Indian tradition, instead of soap. If it is good
for babies, then it is definitely good enough for me and now i rarely use soap.
I can visualize water creatures getting annoyed and even hurt by soap, but
being grateful for besan as it is entirely biodegradable and
life-friendly.
Our
clothing detergent now has no phosphates, no colors, and no fragrances. And the
next step is not to use any cleaner some of the time. You don't always need to
use soap or detergent to get clothes clean. If you need to wash clothes to
freshen them or remove perspiration or odors, and not remove dirt, a cup of
plain baking soda or vinegar will do the trick. For household cleaners, plain
water is good enough or add a spoonful of vinegar and keep that solution handy.
Baking soda is also another amazing natural cleaner. There are safe substitutes
for drain-cleaners, silver polishers, boot polish, and all household chemicals.
The interested reader is referred to Home Safe Home by Debra Lynn Dadd. For
Jains, using cleaners that contain non-toxic and renewable ingredients should
be the default step. We should use products that need no warning labels as that
means that they will not cause violence to anybody!
The
final step is to Change our habits. We can learn from our monks and use
a wet cloth to rub ourselves and not need any cleaners. This habit makes a
statement: our bodies are designed to be self-cleansing and self-healing; we do not need fancy products to be hygienic. We can choose natural
fibers like cotton and wool that do not require detergents and avoid
fluorescent colors. We can stop using the dishwasher and use our own strength
to get tough stains out.
Through
awareness, education and discipline we can live in a way that respects and
nourishes other life.
November 8th, 2008 at 01:35 PM expressive, clear and beneficial thoughts with an honest opinion throughout.