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Your skin is
the body's largest organ weighing in at about 7-9 lbs. It
protects us from the outside world and regulates the body's
heating & cooling systems, with few differences between the
male & female skin. Our skin is extremely sensitive to
external factors such as stress, heat, cold & ultraviolet
radiation. If your skin contains less than 10% water...it will
feel dry. The epidermis is the outer layer of skin cells and the
ones we see, but that is the products of the lower layer of the
skin called the basal layer, where new plump, moist cells are
produced. These travel upward & outward, on their journey
they encounter various hazards that lose some of their moisture
making them leaner. It can take 3-4 months for cells to reach
the epidermis. So in treating the skin, results may not show for
that length of time. When skin cells reach that outer
layer--they fall off and become household dust.
Skin cells
are rich in keratin which also makes up nails and like nails can
become brittle & flaky. Our skin is an excretory organ and
is constantly at work to throw off toxic waste. The sebaceous
gland work hard to lubricate the skin and just how hard they
work determines whether you have dry or oily skin. The skin
produces millions of new cells each day. The cells regenerate
themselves every 30-40 days depending on age. After age 35, the
natural rejuvenating process begins to slow considerably.
Daily
bathing can rob the skin of natural oils & moisture.
Dermatologists do not recommend daily bathing because of this.
To compensate for this, the skin produces more oils, which can
lead to enlarged pores and other cosmetic problems. When robbed
of too much moisture - it loses the ability to store water and
nutrients. Light, moisturizing lotions & creams are best to
help retain the pH value of skin, protect against irritation
& to help keep it from becoming de-hydrated. Pat skin dry,
don't rub. Apply lotions/creams to the skin when it is still
damp from bathing. Lotions & creams blend with the water and
are drawn more easily into the skin, providing additional
moisture and sealing in the water that was absorbed during
bathing. As an added benefit, you use less of your lotions &
creams!
Oils limit
evaporation from the skin and are very moisturizing because of
the barrier to water loss they make on the skin. Most of the big
corporate manufacturers use water as a big part of their base,
although the water helps the products to be less greasy, it also
makes them less moisturizing. Mineral oil is a very common basic ingredient in big
commercial brands because it is cheap. It is a by-product of
petroleum, can cause clogging in the pores....smothers the skin
so it can't breathe, and is considered a carcinogen among many
other unpleasant things. We never use mineral oil in any of our
products, only high quality specialty oils like sweet almond,
jojoba & apricot kernel. These oils are loaded with
vitamins, minerals & proteins.
There are
moisturizers out there that may contain non-oily humectants.
These prevent water loss from the skin by attracting moisture.
Examples of these are glycerine, propylene glycol, lactic acid,
glycolic acid, urea, hydrolyzed proteins, citric acid,
hyaluronic acid & salicylic acid. Some of these work very
well in absorbing moisture from the air, but they only work well
when there is sufficient humidity in the air in which they can
draw from. Synthetic humectants can cause irritation &
contact dermatitis in some people.
So why not
use products on your precious skin whose ingredients are from a
natural source. Along with the specialty oils, we use cocoa
butter, shea butter & essential oils. These too, can heal
& moisturize your skin.
Essential
oils stimulate the skin cells into reproducing at a quicker
rate, thus reducing 'lag time' between new skin growth & the
elimination of toxic debris by improving lymphatic flow &
the general condition of the lymph glands. Essential oils
improve circulation which aids oxygenation & energizes the
epidermis by the rate nutrients are fed to it. Some essential
oils can balance the sebaceous glands, thereby stabilizing
healthy skin conditions. As bactericides they neutralize
unwanted & unfriendly bacteria--preventing blemished
conditions & as anti-inflammatory--they can calm sensitive
& damaged skin. They help to keep collagen & elastin in
good condition. The nutrients & proteins contained in
essential oils can actually restore the building blocks to all
these important tissue fibers. Because the molecules of
essential oils are extremely small, they penetrate the epidermis
& get to do their work with their purity maintained.
Now that
you know a bit more about how & why our skin works, you can
make better decisions about what to use on the largest organ of
your body. So remember...everything you put onto your skin is
absorbed into your body. Wouldn't it make sense to use products
with ingredients that help your skin & body instead of doing
more damage to it??
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