That title is another “everything miracle” clickbait list. It mixes real household uses with exaggerated beauty and health promises.
The “little white box” is Sodium bicarbonate (baking soda). It does have some legitimate uses—but it is not a cure-all for beauty or health.
🧴 What baking soda is actually good for (real uses)
🏠 Home cleaning & freshness
- Deodorizing fridges and cupboards
- Removing mild odors from carpets
- Cleaning sinks and drains (light buildup only)
- Helping lift stains when used gently
🍞 Baking
- Helps baked goods rise when combined with acids (like yogurt or lemon)
🦷 Oral care (limited use)
- Sometimes used in toothpaste for mild stain removal
- Should not be overused due to abrasiveness
🚫 Where the “beauty miracle” claims go wrong
❌ Skin “glow,” acne cures, wrinkle removal
- Baking soda is too alkaline for skin
- It can damage the skin barrier
- May cause irritation, dryness, or worsen dark spots
❌ Under-eye treatments
- Skin here is very thin and sensitive
- Baking soda can cause redness or burning
❌ Detox claims
- The body already detoxes through liver and kidneys
- Baking soda does not “remove toxins” from the body
⚠️ Why these posts spread
They combine:
- real cleaning uses
- traditional home remedies
- beauty promises without evidence
This creates the illusion that one simple product can solve everything.
🧭 Bottom line
Sodium bicarbonate is useful in the kitchen and for cleaning, but it is not a safe or effective skincare or health treatment in most of the ways these articles claim.
If you want, I can break down the “13 ideas” from that article one by one and tell you which ones are actually useful and which are just myths.