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Organisms have incredibly complex biochemical makeup. Flowers will contain minute levels of formaldehyde and other toxic compounds. If there is no floor on what it takes to be "toxic," then only 100% purified chemical compounds could be included.
It would be better to determine what "safe" levels are based on regulatory body recommendations and then try to stay under those.
I admit I was taken aback by the certifications provided by pure oils. I will talk about it with a few labs and see if perhaps things could work. Although I still would have preferred to go with something 100 percent safe.
Even a large volume of water can be toxic to humans. I learned this by playing The Sims.
I assume you mean by ~~investing~~ ingesting and not aspiration / drowning. Yes, this is the case.
As someone else wrote more succinctly in this post, "The dose makes the poison." If we don't quantify the risks from a given exposure, saying something is toxic or non-toxic really has no meaning.
Well, in The Sims it more involved a swimming pool and a disappearing ladder.
https://www.today.com/health/news/water-intoxication-death-rcna99472
How sad is it that fresh water is probably long term a good investment
I'll correct my typo.