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http://www.doctoryourself.com/skin_care.html

 

Natural Skin Care

 

Skin Care Naturally

 

GETTING INTO YOUR OUTSIDE: NATUROPATHIC BODY CARE

 

I think health nuts are right when they emphasize

skin health for total health. Your skin is your

body's largest organ, and virtually the only organ

that you can watch. So many people have skin rashes,

dryness, sores, blisters, corns, dandruff and such

that more attention needs to be given to what holds

you together. Do you realize what you'd look like

without skin? A heap of organs on the floor: how

explicit! The skin also excretes many wastes from the

body. That's what sweating does, in addition, to

automatically cooling you.

 

Naturopathic theory holds that rashes, pimples,

eczema, and illnesses like chicken pox or measles are

attempts by the skin to clean itself out. This idea

will never cease to come up as long as we talk of

nature's way in health: the body will try, must try,

to clean itself of toxins, foreign chemicals and

poisons. Nature eliminates wastes. You may not like

it; it may not look romanti

c; it might even itch. However, the toxins must be

expelled. Since the skin is your largest organ, it

will by nature want to do a lot of cleaning out. The

more it does so, the more you needed it to.

 

" So that's where all those hives and rashes come

from, " you might think, and you'd be essentially

correct. Take a VERY common complaint: dandruff. An

over-abundance of mucus-producing items in the diet

seems to be a basic cause. Persons with dandruff have

found that if they reduce their consumption of m ilk,

ice cream, yogurt and eggs that their dandruff goes

away. No medications, no special patent shampoos. I

have seen this in my own experience, and if you will

pardon me, on my own scalp. Cottage cheese and the

aged cheeses seem to be less involved in making up

what comes off us as dandruff.

 

Over consumption of cooked, processed foods in

general seems to predispose a body for complaints like

this. I even had a dog with dandruff...until I

stopped giving him dry skim milk plus cream plus milk

on top of all the dog food he could eat. When the

dog's diet was cut in half, following a four-day

cleansing fast, the dandruff was gone and never

returned until the animal was overfed again.

 

Simple, proper diet eliminates so many complaints.

Whole foods, raw or lightly-cooked vegetables, grains

and fruits, no meat and no chemically-doctored food

will go a very long way to improving your skin in a

short time. Unfortunately, many folks are inclined

to and even encouraged to put creams, salves,

ointments and other patent remedies on their skin to

" relieve the itching and scaling of the heartbreak of

psoriasis " or to " restore moisture to dry, worn-out

skin. "

 

Let's " clear up " this skin medication question right

here. First of all, there is no such thing as

" worn-out skin. " Fortunately for us, skin is

perennial, self-repairing, and virtually

indestructible. Now just think how many times you

scraped, cut or bruised your skin when you were a kid!

Look at you now; look at your hands, arms and knees.

You're not covered with patches, are you? Nature

repairs and mends skin beautifully. When you cut

yourself, you might disinfect the wound with iodine or

some other preparation. But does the iodine re-knit

the skin, make the new cells, or weave new tissue?

No, nature does. When a surgeon stitches up an

incision or a wound she brings the skin together and

holds it in place with sutures. But if nature didn't

re-unite the cells, what good would the stitches do?

 

Vitamin C and E seem to be most important for proper

healing and maintenance of your skin. Drs. Wilfrid

and Evan Shute used vitamin E, both internally and

externally, in their extremely successful treatment of

third degree burns. Vitamin C is well-known to be

essential to holding the cells together and

encouraging their normal growth (that's a reason why C

is so desperately important to a cancer patient's

body). Vitamin C compresses have been used on severe

skin ulcerations with success surpassing that of

antibiotics. Both of these vitamins can be given

internally, plus applied topically without danger of

side effects. Recovery periods are rapid with each,

and probably best with both. Show me a person with

chronic skin problems and two times out of three I'll

bet their diet is deficient in E or C.

 

For the other one time out of three, the person may

benefit from the Schuessler Cell Salts, particularly

if a needed mineral is missing. How can the skin

function normally if it is lacking a raw material that

it must have? The absence of any one nutrient is a

problem for the whole system. A high-fidelity

enthusiast once told me that a stereo system is only

as good as its weakest part. You can spend a fortune

on the best speakers, the finest amplifier, the

highest quality CD player, and the greatest

recordings. But if there's just one bad electrical

connection, all the rest is useless to you. The

Schuessler minerals in homeopathic potency are

provided in minute but vital quantity and quality. " A

little dab will do ya " if you'll pardon me. J.B.

Chapman, M.D. lists over 85 different skin ailments

that are helped by Schuessler minerals in Dr.

Schuessler's Biochemistry (New Era, London. 1973).

 

Would you like to know what some of the indications

for use are? This is some of what Dr. Chapman

suggests:

 

Cracks in hands: Calc. Flour.

Dry skin: Calc. Phos., Kali. Sulph.

Excessive dryness: Natrum Mur.

Face full of pimples: Calc. Phos., Calc. Sulph...

Greasy scales on skin: Kali. Phos.

(Skin) Heals slowly: Silicea, Calc. Sulph.

Hives: Natr. Phos.

Itching, as from nettles: Calc. Phos.

Itching of skin, with crawling: Kali. Phos., Calc.

Phos.

Ivy poisoning: Kali. Sulph., Natr. Mur.

Rawness of skin in little children: Natr. Phos.

Shingles: Kali. Mur., Natr. Mur.

Warts: Kali. Mur.

 

And there's over 72 more suggestions in this one book

alone.

 

Many of what we call " allergies " are probably just

local or system-wide deficiencies of vitamins or

minerals. As you now know, I don't believe in

allergies. I do, however, believe in one's body

showing in symptoms what it needs in nutrition. Also,

I believe in the body showing that it has received

something it doesn't need. If you're " allergic " to

sulfa drugs or antibiotics, consider yourself

lucky... and normal. Drugs, chemicals, preservatives,

food coloring dyes, and other unnatural substances

have to be high on the body's list of " things to

excrete at first opportunity. " These are foreign,

toxic and very commonly ingested although bad for us.

How is it then, that we are surprised when the

irritant starts a rash, fever, nausea or sneezing?

Wouldn't you expect your body to indicate poisoning in

some way? If someone ate poisoned food and then

developed fever or threw up, we'd agree that the body

was reacting to get rid of the toxin in the best way

it could. When a child eats preserved, colored food

with the vitamins and nutrients processed out of it,

and then develops food sensitivities, where is the

surprise? Even injections and vaccinations are forced

through our skin in an effort to get a drug into our

bloodstream. We should remember that the body may

utilize that same path in trying to get foreign toxins

and poisons out.

 

Think of that next time you see a rash or other skin

symptom.

 

Your skin is a living, breathing, body-cleaning

organ. If you stop it up, you're in trouble. In the

James Bond story Goldfinger people were spray-painted

gold. Remember that they died? Your skin must be

free from pore-clogging coatings. That's why

commercial creams, ointments and salves are not doing

any more than removing the symptoms of skin excretion.

In slowing down or blocking this excretion they are

clogging the pores and of themselves adding to what

has to be cleaned out. Why make the skin have to now

excrete these added toxins on top of the old ones?

It's like shaking the dirt out of your rugs... in the

middle of the living room.

 

If you don't use any of the countless patent skin

treatments for beauty or disease, your skin will be

that much better. Treating symptoms is just trying to

fool Nature. Coating over the body's cleansing efforts

does not make you or your skin well. I don't think

it's wise to use chemical creams or antibiotic

ointments or any of that. Keeping drugs, artificial

colors, preservatives, alcohols, artificial

fragrances, and those foot-long chemical names off

your skin can only help it.

 

If nature had wanted us to use lots of synthetics on

our body, she would probably have put triethanolamine,

carbomer-934, methylparaben, propylparaben,

dimethicone, titanium dioxide, sodium myristate,

stearyl alcohol, FD & C Red #4, Yellow #3 and other

" beauty necessities " within easy reach. As it is,

these and other nostrums are key ingredients in

today's best-selling lotions. I read right from

cosmetic labels, including a " mysterious beauty fluid

(that) works with your skin's own natural moisture to

quickly ease away dryness " and " impart a new radiance

and glow to your skin. " Some are in " a unique

conditioning lotion " that " keeps skin wonderfully soft

and smooth. " Would you care to tell me how they can

do that? It's small wonder why people think they've

got allergies, or that there's something wrong with

their skin. There's nothing wrong with the skin;

there's something wrong with what's layered onto it.

 

As for my family, we use a lot of vitamin E. It's

hard to beat when directly applied to rough, sore or

dry skin. For topical (external) application, simply

take any E capsule and carefully puncture the end of

the capsule. This is easily done with a push-pin or

plastic-handled thumb tack. Then just squeeze the E

directly where you need it. We keep a bottle of 200

IU capsules in the bathroom cabinet and in the past

kept another bottle near the baby changing table, and

use it almost daily for diaper rash, dry skin, chapped

hands, burns, etc.

 

Unlike commercially concocted skin preparations,

vitamin E is wholly natural as long as it's

D-alpha-tocopherol. The " D " form is right handed in

molecular structure, and the " L " form is left handed.

As far as vitamin E is concerned, the body seems to

have a preference for " right-handed " molecules " . (On

the other hand, you body can only use left-handed

vitamin L-ascorbic acid, or vitamin C.) The natural

" D " form of vitamin E is manufactured from vegetable

oils. Fresh vegetable oil is a nutritional source of

E as well, and the Biblical " anointing with oil " or

" binding up wounds in oil " may be seen as very

sensible.

 

Vitamin E promotes rapid, scar-free healing,

prevents infection, feels a lot better on a kid's cut

than iodine, and is almost unbelievably versatile.

Please refer back to the appendix for a list of some

of E's uses. Other entirely natural, simple skin aids

are olive oil and cocoa butter. Both are just

vegetable oils, although cocoa butter is not liquid in

its natural form. It is more like a wax candle, like a

stick. " Cocoa butter lotion " or " cream with natural

cocoa butter " is not 100% cocoa butter. They may

contain some and have wonderfully natural names, but

the words " 100% Cocoa Butter " should be on the label

you look for if you want the real thing. Just apply

the cocoa butter to skin like a stick deodorant or

lipstick.

 

And Speaking of Lipsticks and Deodorants:

Read the labels on cosmetics and anti-perspirants for

a surprise. To think that people coat their 1ips,

faces and underarms with chemicals! Natural cosmetic

products are fortunately available, but label reading

is absolutely necessary. Don't let a company's

natural reputation, natural label names and natural

slogans substitute for a natural product. Please read

the label; if there is no ingredients label, I would

not buy the product.

 

Deodorants don't skimp on chemicals. Of all of

them, Right Guard brand and Mennen brand stick

deodorants are less bad than the most, but is not as

good as what health food stores generally carry.

Anti-perspirants are the worst kind of all deodorants

because they contain aluminum and chemically block up

skin pores and prevent natural sweating. Okay, so

you don't want to sweat? Then dress more seasonally!

When I was in Sydney, Australia, I saw businessmen go

to work in shirts and ties... and shorts! Good idea.

Try wearing cottons more; cotton fabrics " breathe "

more easily than polyesters, nylons and other

synthetics. Some people think and feel that their

bodies prefer natural fiber clothing as they also

prefer natural foods. When I was in high school, the

guys in gym class used to spray their deodorants on

their lockers. Took the paint right off them. Even

back then we wondered, " If it does that to a locker,

what's it doing to our arm-pits? " Perhaps it's enough

to say that I'm glad my family uses something slightly

more natural!

 

Concerning cosmetics, I can't really say that much

from personal experience. My wife uses some make-up,

although I think she's very attractive without it. It

would seem to me that moderation and natural

ingredients would be the two things to look for in

using cosmetics, if you choose to use them at all.

 

Loofas and Dry Towels

There's nothing like a good old fashioned friction

rubdown! A coarse, sponge-like " loofa " is great for

this. A loofa is actually the dried center of a

squash-like plant, which grows easily in a garden

should you have the seeds and the inclination to grow

bath-sponges. Loofas are sold at many drug stores for

a few dollars. Brittle and dry when you buy it, the

loofa softens somewhat when wet but remains an

excellent skin toner. While showering, just scrub

with soap and the loofa and you'll see what I mean.

Old dry and scaly skin is rubbed away and the friction

will give you a healthy pink glow all over. If you

finish your warm shower with a cool water rinse-off

and then a dry towel rub-down, you will find it both

relaxing and invigorating. If you scrub, and rub,

towards the heart you'll be giving yourself a valuable

massage. Masseurs always work in the direction of the

heart to stimulate blood flow in and below the skin.

The direction would be up the arms and up the legs and

then up the trunk.

 

Soaps

I think that simple, pure plain-old soap is best.

After all, all soaps are basically the same anyway

with added colors, fragrances, chemicals, fancy boxes

and higher prices. As the founder of the large

Pear's Soap company said a century ago, " Any fool can

make soap. It takes a clever man to sell it. " The

best soap on the market is unquestionably still plain

no-colors, no-perfume soap. You can use soap

sparingly and still get very clean. This is

especially beneficial if a person is prone to dry

skin. Supplementing the diet with vitamin E may also

help you as much as it has helped my family's

complexions. Soap really doesn't harm healthy skin,

but so many people don't know what it's like to have

healthy skin because of... here it comes again...

because of an unnatural diet that doesn't nourish the

skin in the first place. Beauty is not only skin

deep: it goes from your nose to your toes and from

inside out.

 

Shampoos

If you've never read your shampoo label, now would be

a good time to start. Have you wondered why babies

cry when they get shampoo in their eyes? There are so

many

chemicals - in addition to simple detergent, I mean -

in shampoos, including artificial colors,

preservatives, formaldehyde and such. What on earth is

formaldehyde needed for? Why embalm your hair?

 

It has always been known for its " No More Tears "

products, but Johnson and Johnson have really gone one

better. Their popular Baby Shampoo label now (Sept.

1999) specifically states that it is " As Gentle To

Eyes As Pure Water. " I guess I've been reading only

the front of their label for too long, so now I looked

on the back to find, in addition to the usual

detergents, these goodies: polyquaternium-10,

tetrasodium edta, quaternium-15, and D & C yellow #10

and D & C orange #4. I'm not saying that this stuff is

dangerous. I actually used the product on my kids for

years. I am surprised, though, that Johnson & Johnson

would claim it is as gentle to the eyes as PURE water.

It might have a pH of 7, but those other ingredients

must make it just a little different than H20.

 

So who can be surprised that natural, herbal shampoos

are highly recommended by many health advocates.

There are many brand names of natural-origin

shampoos, and you'd want to read the labels before

purchasing any and reject any bright colors,

preservatives, or long names! One or two natural

ingredients don't make a product natural unless the

rest are natural, too. In case you think that natural

shampoos and soaps must be expensive to use, please

consider this: In terms of quality of ingredients,

" bargain brands " may be the real waste of your money

and generate the biggest profit for manufacturers that

don't care what's in their product. Natural products

may not be the cheapest, but they do cost more to

produce in the first place. Keeping these points in

mind may help you compare quantity and quality and

still save money in the long run. Good daily skin

care is cheaper than a visit to a

dermatologist.

 

In case you feel that natural ingredients are not

important in your shampoo because synthetic

ingredients are carefully tested and approved, please

consider this quotation from " And Now A Word About

Your Shampoo " by Harold C. Hopkins in March 1975 FDA

Consumer:

 

FDA (Food and Drug Administration) authority under the

Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act to regulate synthetic

detergent shampoos, along with other cosmetics, falls

considerably short of the comprehensive kind of

jurisdiction the Act authorizes for regulation of

foods and drugs. The maker of a cosmetic is not

required, as is the sponsor of a new drug, to obtain

FDA approval before marketing to assure that the

product is safe and effective. And cosmetics makers,

unlike food processors, are not required to obtain FDA

clearance to use new additives (except for color

additives) in their products. The law does hold the

manufacturer of a synthetic detergent shampoo or other

cosmetic solely responsible for safety in its use. He

is expected to use ingredients about which there have

been no questions of safety, and to perform adequate

studies... to make sure his product is safe before he

puts it on the market. FDA must trust that the

manufacturer has fulfilled his responsibility.

 

It is only if, or should we say when, an " adverse

reaction " occurs that the consumer or the manufacturer

is supposed to notify FDA and then FDA will " look into

the matter " . This does not seem like much of a

safeguard to the millions of people who may have been

using the product already.

 

FDA's enforcement of its regulatory powers over foods

are weak enough. Think of all the chemicals,

preservatives, dyes and other additives that are

legally allowed, to contaminate our food. To think

that FDA's authority over cosmetics and shampoos is

actually less than its control over " Kool-Aid, "

" Twinkies, " Mello Yello, " " Hamburger Helper " and

bologna!

 

And if you think that's bad, consider soap itself.

This same article also says this:

 

The Food. Drug and Cosmetic Act of 1938 defines a

cosmetic. But the same law specifically excludes soap

from this definition of a cosmetic and it Is thus

exempt from FDA regulation.

 

We'd better all read the package labels for everything

we put on our bodies as well as for everything we put

into them. The Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act of 1938

was a very watered down excuse for the original and

very strict Food and Drug Act of 1906. The original

1906 law actually permitted only pure foods and drugs!

It didn't last long, after industrial lobbying and

governmental corruption started after it. If you want

to read an account of this amazing and unlawful

process, it is all in Dr. Harvey W. Wiley's A History

of a Crime Against the Food Law, most recently

republished only by photocopy. This is probably

another job for your skilled librarian and an

interlibrary loan. If you still think that the

government protects us from toxic substances in what

we eat or drink or put on our skin, it's time to

reconsider.

 

There is little question that natural cosmetic

products, soaps and shampoos are nearly as important

to us as natural foods. Nature is best for your

inside and your outside.

 

 

Copyright C 1980, 1981, 2000 Andrew W. Saul.

Reprinted from the book DOCTOR YOURSELF, Chapter 13,

by Dr. Andrew Saul, Number 8 Van Buren Street, Holley,

New York 14470.

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