• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Partners in Health & Wholeness

Partners in Health & Wholeness

An initiative of the NC Council of Churches

Get Involved Donate
  • About
    • Staff
    • Values Statement
    • PHW Sustainability Pledge
    • Newsletter Sign-Up
  • Current PHW Offerings
    • Abundant Life
    • Overdose Response
  • Focus Areas
  • Events
  • Resources
    • PHW Publications
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Interactive Map
  • Voices
  • NCCC

Search Partners in Health & Wholeness

The Right Step At Home—A New Fitness Guide

September 9, 2014 · by Joy Williams, Former PHW Regional Coordinator

Forget the yoga mats and fitness tapes, and step your way to health in your home, while using less toxic products. I enjoy the work of Partners in Health and Wholeness and I get excited about how we are connected to all the other programs at the Council. I appreciate even more when we can combine our programs in unique ways. Here is an idea that combines PHW and NCIPL–walking and reducing the toxic materials used in the home.

I have always loved walking but love it even more when I walk and multi-task, and I don’t mean talking on the phone. The multi-tasking I’m thinking of is the physical activity it takes to pick up buckets, move water, mix four pounds here, slosh a five-gallon bucket of water around over there (water weighs eight pounds per gallon), and carry pots back and forth. It’s work and really reminds me of my days spent in Mali or in the rural life of Costa Rica. Here in the States, most of us are exempt from having to do so much labor to get through the daily chores of life. Unlike many folks around the world, we can push our gas pedal places and buy from expansive markets. So why change? Well, if you want an easier way of exercising and saving money, this might be an idea for you to try. I have found that it saves me more than $40 dollars a month on a gym membership, I shell out less money for cleaning products, and I am getting physical activity along the way.

So, here was my challenge. I decided to log the steps as I made different cleaning products. I did this for three straight days.The con is that they are not within a specific time frame, like an hour. That is because some of these recipes take time to “be ready”, and  that was perfect time for me to focus on other chores. These steps include walking in the store as well as in the home. Also, I live in an apartment, and while our living dimensions might be different, I think you will get the point that there is plenty of physical activity to be had by changing some simple habits. While I don’t provide the recipes in this blog post, I will in upcoming ones. I just wanted you to see the exercise potential.

1361 steps the first day:

DIY rain water spray bottle

DIY liquid laundry detergent

Compost

DIY mouthwash

Recycled

 

92 steps second day:

DIY magnesium oil

Spanish tortilla (tried a new recipe for an event in Troy, NC)

DIY ginger tea

Washing shirt by hand

 

152 steps the third day:

Attended DIY worm bin

DIY air freshener

DIY car cleaner

Cleaned up spilled DIY laundry detergent in car (oops!)

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Environment, Food, Health

About Joy Williams, Former PHW Regional Coordinator

I am passionate about health and faith. Children, families, and elders have my deepest love and concern, and I've cultivated a heart for dance, plants, cooking, water, chilling with great friends, and talking about the matters of the heart. I love the Lord and seek to bring myself and others closer to The King Most High.
Learn more about PHW and our efforts to improve the health of God’s people: healthandwholeness.org

Footer

Contact

Partners in Health & Wholeness
27 Horne St.
Raleigh, NC 27607
(919) 828-6501
info@ncchurches.org

Subscribe

Click here to subscribe to newsletters and blog updates.

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2025 · Partners in Health & Wholeness · An Initiative of the North Carolina Council of Churches · All Rights Reserved · Website by Tomatillo Design