water

Healing Sleep—Top Tools and Practices

Quality sleep isn’t only a luxury option. It is a cornerstone of health. By managing your light and sensorial environment and going for optimal comfort, you can rejuvenate yourself and enjoy better sleep.

Sleep is healing

Your body has an amazing, self-rejuvenating ability to repair itself while it sleeps. It has its own internal electrical system that functions with weak electrical impulses. 

You can amplify your body’s natural tendency to rest, recuperate, and heal by making space to support it.

Use tools that help your body relax and release daily stresses and anxieties. Keep your space clear of environmental pollutants for an undisturbed sleep. 

Quit the social jet lag

Most people live discordant day/night cycles that have them feeling perpetually jet lagged, and their hormones deranged.

Sleep is a powerful time to reset your cycles. By extension, your bedroom is the most important room for your to regain your optimal health.

You will wake up actually feeling refreshed and ready for your day. 

Chances are you already have these tools on hand. Make them part of your daily routine to begin reaping the health benefits of better sleep. 

Here are some ideas.  

  1. The power of water 

Taking a bath at the end of the day is a classic relaxing habit. Many studies show the health benefits of this simple habit:

  • increasing blood circulation

  • joints and muscles relax 

  • a moderated water pressure massages your whole body 

  • lowering core body temperature which helps deepen sleep 

This last benefit is an intriguing one. A warm bath helps “open” or dilate blood vessels, increasing circulation. This helps the body release extra heat energy, in effect lowering your body temperature. 

Many cultures have bathing habits and rituals, usually before bedtime. Even if you don’t a bathtub, a good shower can provide similar effects. 

Top tools and practices to harness the power of water for sleep:

  • Berkey Water filter — remove fluoride and contaminants

  • Natural Loofah Bath mitts

  • Bath salts—Epsom salts 

2. Aromatherapy and Incense 

Have you ever had memories triggered just by smelling particular smells? Called the “Proust effect”, it is perhaps the most primal of senses, smell holds surprising sway over cognition, emotion and even other senses.

When a smell is detected, the olfactory neurones passes information to the limbic system that comprises a set of structures within the brain that are regarded by scientists as playing a major role in controlling mood, memory, behaviour and emotion.

Aromatherapy can be a profound resource for revitalising your energy, soothing the spirit, and bringing harmony and tranquility to your body’s energy centers. using natural plant extracts for therapeutic healing promotes the total well-being of your mind, body, and spirit.

Top tools and practices to harness the power of aromatherapy for sleep:

  • Glass diffuser — Choose a location for your diffuser where it’ll be near you throughout the day. 

  • Essential oils 

3. Set up your bed space

This part is less of a habit, and more of a one-time investment. Bite the bullet to set up a truly Tox-free space that supports your circadian rhythms.

Toss any toys, pillows, cushions, and lounge furniture made with harmful materials, from flame retardants to hormone mimicking materials.

Opt for healthier materials — it is an inexpensive way to reduce exposures to toxic chemicals indoors, which is where we spend most of our time.

Keeping the bed minimal helps better sleep by simply removing the stress of having to straighten it all up in the morning (and during the night)!

It reduces dust mites, which are microscopic arachnids that feed on the dead skin cells we shed while we sleep.

It also reduces estrogenic dust, basically indoor dust that mimics sex hormones such as estrogen and testosterone in human cells!

Top tools and practices to set up the best sleep space:

  • Organic mattress and pillow protectors

  • Wet sponge mop

  • Blue blockers glasses

  • Blackout natural linen curtains

4. Wear natural sleepwear

Clothes are your second skin (the first is our own skin). Natural materials, such as linen and cotton, breathe and regulate temperature better, and are moisture-wicking.

Best sleepwear:

  • Linen pyjamas

  • slippers— filled with all-natural French lavender

5. Eliminate artificial EMFs

When it comes to invisible electromagnetic fields, you have to find and measure it, and then fix it.

If you cannot engage a professional Building Biologist, you can still reduce your exposure by eliminating possible sources.

In the typical sleeping area, electrical exposure from external sources (live electrical wiring in ceilings, walls and floors) is thousands of times stronger than the body’s own electrical system. Long-term exposure to these high level electric fields can impair the body’s ability to communicate within itself and impact health.

We spends about 1/3 of our life sleeping.

Night after night in such elevated levels of electricity, you may experience symptoms such as: headaches, hyperactivity, nightmares, depression, fatigue, eyestrain, and muscle cramps.

Ways to reduce artificial EMFs:

  • Battery-powered clocks, instead of electric clocks

  • EMF Kill Switch — Turn off bedroom-affecting circuits

  • Bed canopy — Eliminate, minimise, or shield from RF

  • Metal-free bed 

  • EMF detector

6. Sleep on biological bed linen

Just like the bed clothes you sleep in, all natural, organic bed sheets help regulate temperature and balance your body’s electromagnetic field.

Avoid synthetics that contribute to estrogenic dust and electrical imbalances.

Weighted blankets work wonders for those who struggle with anxiety and restlessness. Some, like this, offer a 7-layer design and glass bead filling to provide body temperature control.

Natural and organic bedding:

  • Linen bedsheets made to order

7. Space to daydream 

Ideally you have used the other tools to discharge the stresses of the day.

This habit is a little more personal than the others, as you can choose any item and area in your room that helps you enter a daydream state. This is a brainwave state where your brain naturally winds down from active beta waves to theta and, ideally, into delta.

Even if we had a fantastic day, our brain still likes to go over any possible hiccups—just in case. It’s doing exactly what it ought to, which is to look out on your behalf, relentlessly combing over every detail received during the day in an effort to prepare for the worst. You can never be truly refreshed in the morning if your mind is cycling negative thoughts and scenarios all night. 

However, we want to turn off this dooms-prepping during the night. One effective way is to be proactive to impress upon the subconscious positive thoughts. 

Top tools and practices to make space for the best dreams:

  • Gratitude Journal 

  • Planner 

  • Tuning fork 

  • Sound bowl 

  • Tatami mat with natural rush (no foam)

  • Metal-Free AirTubes

Have you used any of these items for better sleep? What are some of your favourite bedtime habits and practices? Share your tips and experiences #bettersleep #spacetoheal

Research: Review on Water Issues in Malaysia

The water you drink and bathe in in your house affects your health.

The chlorine with which almost all municipal water is treated reacts with naturally occurring organic materials, creating harmful trihalomethanes.

This is in addition to the chlorine itself which is a microbial poison.

Read the research study here: The paper was published August 2021 International Journal of Research in Business and Social Science (2147-4478) 11(8):860-875. DOI: 10.6007/IJARBSS/v11-i8/10783

Is Your Tap Water Safe To Drink In Malaysia?

The paper review focuses on water management and usage practices in Malaysia. But it yields astonishing insights into the quality of water declining tremendously in the nation.

While the beautiful tropical country of Malaysia is blessed with the abundant resource, multiple municipal weakness mean the tap water can often be dangerously polluted.

A basic good practice is to install the best personal water filter you can at home to prevent heavy metal contamination.

Insights from the paper:

  • Aluminium contamination is higher recorded more than the standard limit set by the Ministry of Health guidelines for drinking water. Based on a 2011 study , from two housing areas with a total of 100 respondents, the mean value of daily chronic aluminum intake (CDI) in PR drinking water (0.00707 mg / kg / day) is much higher than MPL (0.00164 mg / kg / day)!

  • Half (49.5%) of all water supply problems in Malaysia were reported in — a densely populated state that houses the main city and urban areas. That increased in 2017 to 62.4% (Malay Mail, 2019).

    Nowadays, water shortage is no longer considered a natural disaster that must be borne and accepted but instead is a human-made cause that can be dealt with and solved by humans.

  • mining, industrial, and agricultural activities also contribute to the contamination of heavy metals in the body of water due to improper management of wastewater and discharge from fertilisers (Karavoltsos, 2008). However, most heavy metals from surface water and groundwater are usually removing during the water treatment process (Kioko & Obiri, 2012). Furthermore, corrosion of water pipes, faucets, and water fixtures can cause contaminated water supply for daily use. Unclean practices at home, such as improper drinking water storage containers and unclean operators, also contribute to this. This exposes consumers to the dangers of excess copper ions in drinking water, which can lead to acute poisoning and lead to diseases and ailments, such as liver damage, heart and kidney failure, and brain disease.

  • the cost of treating polluted water is high and reduces the overall water availability. In the year 2019, toxic chemical pollution in the Kim River in Pasir Gudang (Johor), which disrupts the water supply to around 20,000 households, is an example. Furthermore, there were 160 cases of river pollution reported in which enforcement was taken during the Movement Control Order (MCO) period from March 18 to May 4, 2020 (Malay Mail, 2019).

  • How polluted are the rivers? The Malaysian Environmental Quality Report 2017 shows that the percentage of clean rivers has decreased since 2015, while the rate of polluted rivers has increased.

    …(out of 89 river basins in Peninsular Malaysia) 25 ‘dead’ rivers in Malaysia. Sixteen rivers were found in Johor, five in Selangor, three in Penang, and one in Melaka. These rivers were categorised under Classes 4 and 5, which are reserved for highly polluted rivers and where aquatic life cannot survive (The Sunday Daily, 2019).

  • Many factories operate illegally along the banks of the Semenyih River. This adds to pollution to a source that serves several areas around the country’s capital such as Hulu Langat, Kuala Langat, Sepang and Petaling.

  • This fact tells us about the possible integrity of pipes channelling water produced by treatment plants to consumer homes. Water wastage could be due to pipe leaks, inaccuracies of customer meters, and unauthorised use. The amount of water wasted in Malaysia is too high, with a national average of 35%. This rate is equivalent to losing 35 liters from every 100 liters of treated water (The Star, 2020).

The only way to assure the quality of what you drink and cook with is by having your own purification system

You can take steps to ensure that your own water system is carefully and periodically maintained.

Typically, purification systems for large municipal water systems can be standard off the shelf systems.


How is your water? Do you have questions about how to get the best water quality?

Do you know your water quality parameters and water treatment options? Get in touch to find out more about how you can find suitable carbon filters, types of purification systems, reverse osmosis, sterilization, and water conditioning.