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Cleopatra's Milk Bath Formula

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Cleopatra's Milk Bath Formula

by Annie Berthold-Bond

 

 

Cleopatra was famous for her beautiful skin. Her secret was that she

soaked in baths of fresh milk.

 

 

Modern laboratories now know why milk worked such wonders for her skin:

the lactic acid in milk is an alpha hydroxy acid, a natural material

that dissolves the glue that holds dead skin cells together. Milk can

cleanse the skin down to its deepest layers.

 

 

This secret beauty formula couldn't be simpler. Add 2 to 4 cups of fresh

milk or buttermilk to the bathwater as the tub is filling. Soak for a

good 20 minutes. Gently rub your skin with a washcloth or loofa to

slough off the dead skin. Rinse your body thoroughly after soaking.

 

 

Caution: Very hot baths are not good for those with high blood pressure,

and they can be draining for anyone. Skip this bath if you are allergic

to milk or are lactose intolerant.

 

 

www.care2.com

 

 

"When you get to the end of your rope, tie a knot and hang on."

 

Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882 - 1945), quoted Kansas City Star, June 5, 1977

 

Check Out My Groups:

 

Everything Natural

http://health./

Everything Magick

EverythingMagick/

 

 

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Thank you! I want to try this. But I love drinking milk so much that it will be a challenge. Do you know if it is only whole milk?

On 11/17/06, Jose and Diana Gonzalez <joseanddiana wrote:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cleopatra's Milk Bath Formula

by Annie Berthold-Bond

 

 

Cleopatra was famous for her beautiful skin. Her secret was that she

soaked in baths of fresh milk.

 

 

Modern laboratories now know why milk worked such wonders for her skin:

the lactic acid in milk is an alpha hydroxy acid, a natural material

that dissolves the glue that holds dead skin cells together. Milk can

cleanse the skin down to its deepest layers.

 

 

This secret beauty formula couldn't be simpler. Add 2 to 4 cups of fresh

milk or buttermilk to the bathwater as the tub is filling. Soak for a

good 20 minutes. Gently rub your skin with a washcloth or loofa to

slough off the dead skin. Rinse your body thoroughly after soaking.

 

 

Caution: Very hot baths are not good for those with high blood pressure,

and they can be draining for anyone. Skip this bath if you are allergic

to milk or are lactose intolerant.

 

 

www.care2.com

 

 

 

" When you get to the end of your rope, tie a knot and hang on. "

 

Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882 - 1945), quoted Kansas City Star, June 5, 1977

 

Check Out My Groups:

 

Everything Natural

http://health./

 

Everything Magick

EverythingMagick/

 

 

-- RiverFormerly SeaSprites(trying to condense email accounts)I no longer know who I am...

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A friend of mine told me to not only put milk in the bath for

Cleopatra's bath. But inside a coffee filter, add cinnamon, honey and

rose petals, then tie it and it makes it like a tea bag for your warm

bath :)

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