http://www.buddhistchannel.tv/index.php ... 84,0,0,1,0
mindyourmind wrote:I saw this on The Buddhist Channel, and must say that I have never really checked my incense for its contents. Seems as if I should![]()
http://www.buddhistchannel.tv/index.php ... 84,0,0,1,0

I'm with you on that one! You should see what happens when I do Riwo Sang Cho practice, we are talking billowing clouds of incense smoke! Anyway the article is talking about those cheap and nasty joss sticks. Truth is though, that whenever you burn anything it lets off lots of toxic chemicals as a consequence, but the joss sticks tend to be loaded with lots of toxic chemicals before being burnt so you can imagine what goes on as they are burnt!Huseng wrote:Burn it all around until the air turns brown.

gregkavarnos wrote:I'm with you on that one! You should see what happens when I do Riwo Sang Cho practice, we are talking billowing clouds of incense smoke! Anyway the article is talking about those cheap and nasty joss sticks. Truth is though, that whenever you burn anything it lets off lots of toxic chemicals as a consequence, but the joss sticks tend to be loaded with lots of toxic chemicals before being burnt so you can imagine what goes on as they are burnt!Huseng wrote:Burn it all around until the air turns brown.

Stick to using natural incenses made from herbs and resins without the addition of synthetic perfumes (if it lists benzyl... or phenyl... avoid it) or (what I normally do, especially for sang purposes) make your own incense from natural herbs, spices, flowers, wood and resins and burn them on charcoal.mindyourmind wrote:Is there a rule of thumb with this challenge?
I have to admit that during my smoking days I was a sucker for aromatic tobacco mixes and especially Indonesian Kretek cigarettes. Clove flavoured cigarettes with a sweetened clove flavoured filter! My friend, who was an marketing exec for British American Tobaccos, told me that they were considering buying the company that produced Kretek cigarettes until they got the laboratory reports on the dioxin levels!Yeshe wrote:The guy clearly has never smoked juniper or geranium. Ahem!

gregkavarnos wrote:I have to admit that during my smoking days I was a sucker for aromatic tobacco mixes and especially Indonesian Kretek cigarettes. Clove flavoured cigarettes with a sweetened clove flavoured filter! My friend, who was an marketing exec for British American Tobaccos, told me that they were considering buying the company that produced Kretek cigarettes until they got the laboratory reports on the dioxin levels!Yeshe wrote:The guy clearly has never smoked juniper or geranium. Ahem!
gregkavarnos wrote:Stick to using natural incenses made from herbs and resins without the addition of synthetic perfumes (if it lists benzyl... or phenyl... avoid it) or (what I normally do, especially for sang purposes) make your own incense from natural herbs, spices, flowers, wood and resins and burn them on charcoal.mindyourmind wrote:Is there a rule of thumb with this challenge?
If you want to make incense pellets (instead of leaving the ncense in powder form) to burn on charcoal, then slowly drizzle honey into the powder mix until you make a "dough" then roll it into balls/pellets/disks and leave them to dry. If the mix contains lots of resins you can just mix it with water or even rose water or lemon blossom water and it'll stick together. If they remain sticky even after drying you can coat them with baby/talcum powder (unscented is even better).
Some of my favorite ingredients: clove powder, cinammon powder, frankincense resin, myrrh resin, benzoin, nutmeg powder, crushed amber, saffron, copal, sage, lavender, sandalwood powder, guggul (only for protectors, not for general offerings), crushed cedar wood or tips, pine resin, rose petals, the list goes on forever!
You can also add a little essential oil as well.
It's good to have a mortar and pestle that you use only for making incense coz if you use the mortar and pestle from last night when you were crushing garlic for the homemade pesto, well...
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PS Even these natural ingredients produce some toxic substances when burnt, but obviously not to the same extent as when you burn toxic substances.
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