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Aloha Bay Coconut Wax Tea Lights In Cups Unscented White -- 12 Candles


Aloha Bay Coconut Wax Tea Lights In Cups Unscented White
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Aloha Bay Coconut Wax Tea Lights In Cups Unscented White -- 12 Candles

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Aloha Bay Coconut Wax Tea Lights In Cups Unscented White Description

  • Fair Trade - Handmade in Indonesia
  • 12 Unscented Tea Lights in Aluminum Cups
  • Recycled Cardboard Packaging
  • Pure Cotton Wicks
  • Burn Time: 5 Hours
  • Coconut Wax Blend
  • Soy & GMO Free
  • Petroleum Free

100% Vegetable Coconut Wax Blend

These tea lights contain only GMO free vegetable oils, no petroleum based paraffin or other synthetic additives.


Directions

Burning Instructions

Tea Light cups can get very hot, so always place them on heat-resistant surfaces. Avoid drafts. Keep away from curtains and other flammable objects. Eliminate wick trimmings and other debris from around the flame. Never leave a burning candle unattended.

Free Of
GMOs, petroleum and soy.

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.


Ingredients: 100% Vegetable Coconut Wax Blend.
These tapers contain only GMO free vegetable oils.
Warnings

Never leave a burning candle unattended. Keep out of reach of children and pets.

The product you receive may contain additional details or differ from what is shown on this page, or the product may have additional information revealed by partially peeling back the label. We recommend you reference the complete information included with your product before consumption and do not rely solely on the details shown on this page. For more information, please see our full disclaimer.
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5 Reasons Why Giving is Good for Your Health

Being generous has its perks. A bevy of studies suggest that giving time—or money—to those in need offers a backdoor into better health. Here are five of the wonderful benefits you get when you give.

Woman Being Generous Holding Red Gift Box in Hands | Vitacost.com/blog

1. Lowers blood pressure

Being a part of a social network has positive corollaries for your health: you live longer, are less prone to illness and have lower blood pressure than if you are isolated.  And when you tangibly give to others, those impacts get even more pronounced.

A study published in the International Journal of Psychophysiology showed that givers experienced heightened self-esteem, less depression and significantly lower blood pressure than those less prone to put on their helper’s hat.

2. Makes you live longer

Taking care of others is a surprising way to take care of yourself—and it’s more effective than you might think. A 2013 roundup of studies related to volunteering found that helping others on a regular basis can reduce early mortality rates by 22 percent, in contrast to the mortality rates of the volunteering-averse. To earn the pay-off, the help has to be consistent and entail a minimum of an hour a month of diligent effort.

What’s the common thread among these studies of how helping others benefits health? The speculation is that connecting to others in substantial ways wards off loneliness, which many studies have found to be as dangerous as smoking in terms of its long-term health impacts.

3. Creates positive associations

A recent study found that recalling memories of times you have given before, rather than times you have received, generates a desire to be more generous. The researchers found that people who actively recalled the times they had given to others were the most likely to donate money, with 46.15 percent of those who remembered their own generosity indicating that they would do so.

4. Induces a helper’s high

A study published in Science found voluntary gift giving activates the brain’s pleasure centers. This might explain why some people feel a “warm glow” when they’ve donated money to a good cause. Performing an altruistic act releases endorphins similar to the one released during exercise, contributing to a “helper’s high.”

5. Goes viral

Giving can generate a pay-it-forward ripple effect. A study by James Fowler of the University of California, San Diego, and Nicholas Christakis of Harvard, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, suggests that generosity has a cascading effect on others—specifically three degrees of separation (from person to person to person).

Generosity is contagious—it immediately inspires people to act in a similar fashion. One generous acts spawns two more, and so on, so that a few generous actions can quickly influence hundreds of people.

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