Five years ago, Mimi Barker, a young woman in her 20s, was diagnosed with breast cancer. Her younger sister Lela, intent on understanding how her young sister could develop breast cancer, began researching possible breast cancer causes. What she found prompted her into reading ingredient labels of all the beauty and bath care products in her bathroom, and she was stunned to find most had the paraben ingredient researchers were suggesting increased breast cancer risks for women. Lela advised Mimi to get rid of everything that contained paraben, and she did the same. Faced with the reality that the market did not offer many appealing natural and organic personal beauty care products, Lela began making her own in her kitchen. She shared what she made with her sister and her friends. Lela found she enjoyed creating soaps, bath salts and lotions that rivaled the commercial products in aroma and texture.


In 1998, Katie Couric lost her husband,
Jay Monahan, in the prime of his life, to colon cancer. Since then, Couric has been a passionate crusader in raising
public awareness about colon cancer and in stressing the vital importance of colon cancer screening for everyone over
40 years of age. "Jay was just 41 when he was diagnosed, and it would have taken a very astute doctor to pick up
on it being colorectal cancer early on," says Couric. "He was pretty much asymptomatic. He had no family
history. You can be feeling perfectly fine – on top of the world physically – and still have colorectal
cancer. One of the many difficult things about this disease is you often have no symptoms. You may not have blood in
your stool, or have lost weight or your bowels habits may not have changed. But you could still have the disease."








