Connect With Our Holistic Wellness Editorial Team
Use this page to reach our editorial desk with questions, feedback, press notes, or partnership ideas.
We Welcome Your Questions and Feedback
If something we published helped you—or left you unsure, tell us. We read messages with the same care we bring to our edits.
Most notes fall into a few buckets: a product you want us to look at, a routine you're trying to simplify, or a "this didn't feel quite right" reaction to a claim. All of those are useful. The fastest way to help us respond is to include the page URL and the exact line you're reacting to.
When you're sharing a personal health situation, keep it high-level. We can point you toward clearer information and safer framing, but we can't troubleshoot individual medical decisions over email.
A quick note on what helps: subject lines like "Correction request: /clean-beauty/…" or "Press inquiry: deadline Friday" get routed correctly on the first pass.
Good reasons to write
- You spotted a typo, broken link, or outdated detail.
- You want us to clarify a recommendation or add context.
- You have a story lead that fits holistic wellness, mindful home, or sustainable living.
- You're a brand or practitioner with a specific, verifiable angle (not a broad pitch).
What to include (so we can act)
- The link to the page you mean.
- One sentence on what you're asking for.
- Any supporting source you trust (a label photo, a study link, a policy page).
- Your timeline, if there's a deadline.
We don't publish every suggestion, but we do log patterns. If several readers flag the same confusing sentence, that's usually a sign we need to rewrite it.
How to Reach Our Editorial Desk
Email is the cleanest channel for us—one thread, searchable, easy to hand off when needed.
Write to our Director, Alistair Beaumont, at [email protected]. If your note is about a specific article, paste the link near the top of the message. If it's general feedback, tell us which section of the site you were reading (clean beauty, holistic wellness, mindful home, design notebook, or sustainable living).
Response times vary with publishing weeks and review cycles; time-sensitive requests are easiest to handle when the deadline is stated plainly in the first line.
Routing tip: If you're requesting a correction, include "Correction" in the subject and quote the sentence you want us to revisit.
We treat reader notes like margin comments on a draft: specific, sometimes blunt, often helpful.
If you're reaching out about privacy or site terms, use the same email and label the subject clearly. We'll route it to the right place without bouncing you around.
Collaborations and Press Inquiries
We're open to collaborations that respect readers' time and intelligence.
Here's what tends to work: a tight proposal, a clear reason it belongs on OlivineLife, and enough detail that we can verify what you're claiming. If you're offering products for consideration, say what's in the box and what you want us to evaluate. If you're proposing an interview, share the angle and the person's direct connection to it.
We do accept press releases, but we rarely run them as-is. The best press notes read like a starting point for reporting, not a finished story.
Partnerships we consider
- Editorial collaborations with a defined scope and review process.
- Expert commentary where credentials and conflicts are transparent.
- Longer-term projects (multi-month) with measurable reader value.
What we usually decline
- Vague "brand awareness" pitches without a concrete deliverable.
- Requests to approve copy we didn't write.
- Claims that can't be checked with public documentation.
One practical limitation: wellness topics can hinge on individual context, so we're careful about sweeping statements even when a product is popular.
For press, partnerships, or editorial questions, email Alistair Beaumont and include your deadline and the simplest possible summary of your request.
Email the Editorial DeskIf you're proposing something unusual, ask yourself: would a reader thank us for spending time on this—or would they feel sold to?