grumpy_owl
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2014
- Messages
- 342
- Reaction score
- 414
Right on, Retropixie! Just looking at the picture posted I just about choked--by claiming that hers is the ONLY company making "synthetic-free" skincare products (and I don't even know where to begin with that choice of words), she's implying that everyone else is just gleefully tearing open boxes delivered from Monsanto HQ and pouring "synthetics" into their soaps, no doubt while rubbing their hands together and cackling, and probably not even in a solar/wind powered yurt but in some house (ew!) that is powered by electricity (fascists!).The sad thing is that people like this are the ones that ruin it for the rest of us. I wonder if she is doing nothing but MP and not CP? I would have said something to her about her claims....but I tend to speak up when I see something like this.
We are all doing this to succeed--in giving ourselves, friends and family a great bathing experience and being kind to their skin; or in having a nice little business that does good in the world. I'd like to believe that while we wish for own own success, we do not wish for others to fail, but that's the result of making such a claim. So much for hippie-dippy love and peace and sunshine. All the Ren Faire flower wreaths in the world can't make up for the fact that you just dissed me and the hobby I love so much.
Perusing their FAQ, though, is a delight. She explains how to bathe. She creates a fascinating false dichotomy between "fresh" soap and its natural opposite, "stale" soap. (!!!) But I have to give her props for clever marketing: sell fast-melting barely-cured soaps, promise people they'll last 4 to 6 weeks, whereupon they'll need another bar. Why have I been waiting until my soaps are cured, mild, and gentle when I could just tell customers they won't last long and they'll have to come back for more?