Four Stupidest Things Americans Do To Their Skin
Posted by drbrickey on January 12, 2008
Action to take
Make sure you protect your skin from the sun every day you–
are exposed to the sun and only use skin care products that are:
~pH balanced
~free of mineral oil
~free of dyes and fragrances
Why
A friend called me in distress. To celebrate his birthday his kids washed
his new car–only they used Brillo scouring pads. What would you say to the kids?
We periodically replace worn out cars. Most Americans do the equivalent of a
car wash with scouring pads to their skin every day. We have to live
with our skin the rest of our lives. How you look affects how you feel
and how others treat you. Don’t do the stupidest things to your skin.
Stupidest Mistake #1 Using Soap
You’re probably thinking I’m nuts. Don’t we need soap to be clean and
get rid of germs? Your sebaceous glands keep your skin at a pH between
5.5 and 6.5 (slightly acidic) for optimal health. Most soap is very alkaline
and strips your skin of its protective oils. What may feel “squeaky clean”
is really dehydrated and vulnerable to free radical damage. All soaps, shampoos,
shaving cream, moisturizers, and cosmetics should be pH balanced to protect
your skin. It may sound like I am overreacting, but it makes a difference.
Stupidest Mistake #2 Mineral Oil
Baby oil is 100% mineral oil. Why? Cloth diapers needed a barrier between
the baby’s skin and wet diaper. With absorbent paper diapers, an oil barrier isn’t needed.
So now we can use baby products that nurture your baby’s or grandbaby’s skin so it can
breathe and not get diaper rash. In the U.S. most cosmetic companies use mineral oil
because it is cheaper than water-based alternatives and it seems to moisturize
because it coats your skin. Your body is water based and like oil and vinegar
salad dressing, mineral oil doesn’t interact much with your water based skin.
Most European countries ban mineral oil from cosmetics and skin care products.
Some pricey cosmetics even use water-based moisturizers in Europe and mineral oil-based
moisturizers in the U.S. Mineral oil coats your skin, clogs your pores, and prevents
your skin from breathing. It keeps your skin from exfoliating dead skin cells and toxins.
It keeps your skin from absorbing vitamins, nutrients, and antioxidants in a moisturizer.
Stupidest Mistake #3 Fragrances and Dyes
The most common causes of skin reactions and allergic reactions are the fragrances
and dyes that are added to soaps, shampoos, shaving cream, moisturizers, and cosmetics.
Having your hair smell like coconuts or mangos or bananas or be a pretty color often
comes with a cost. For the healthiest skin–no fragrances, no dyes.
Stupidest Mistake #4 Sun Damage
Most people don’t get enough sun. Sun is vital to feeling good and avoiding depression.
Like bears, many people respond to less sunlight in the winter by becoming depressed,
grouchy, and less active. Our bodies use sunshine to produce Vitamin D. Many Americans
have insufficient Vitamin D, a vitamin that helps with calcium absorption and
preventing osteoporosis. By all means, try to get some sunshine every day.
But sun also is by far the biggest cause of skin damage–wrinkling, drying, and skin cancer.
Skin cancer is three times more common than breast cancer and lung cancer combined
and accounts for half of new cancer diagnoses in the U.S. Sun tans are a sign of sun damage
to the skin and sunburn greatly increases the risk of skin cancer. Sun tans may look good
in the short run but in the long run they contribute to leathery, wrinkled skin and a
much higher risk of skin cancer.
If you insist on a suntan, ask me about a safe way to tan your skin without the sun or with
less sun. With the ozone depletion, sunscreen becomes even more important to healthy skin.
For prolonged sun exposure, use a sunscreen and if your skin gets red, a post sun skin treatment.
For modest sun exposure, use a moisturizer that includes a sunscreen.
Seeing Your Future
Imagine it is tomorrow morning and you are looking in the bathroom mirror.
Make a mental snapshot of how that looks now. Now imagine that 20 years
have passed and during those 20 years you didn’t give your skin much thought
–and now it shows in dry, wrinkly, perhaps even leathery skin with age spots.
It has some suspicious areas that you need to have your doctor check to
make sure it isn’t skin cancer. You say to yourself as Satchel Paige said,
“If I had known I was going to live so long, I would have taken better care of myself.”
Make a snapshot of the picture. Now imagine that tomorrow you start being kind
to your skin–using skin care products that are pH balanced, free of mineral oil,
free of fragrances, and free of dyes. You use a botanically based moisturizer
that includes a sunscreen and you are careful about sun exposure. Within days
your skin starts feeling softer and smoother and has a healthier glow. Within weeks
wrinkles get a little smaller and scarcer. And 20 years later your skin still looks good.
Which future do you want? Which image do you want to have to look at for several decades?
Quotes
Won’t you come into my garden? I would like my roses to see you.
~Richard Sheridan
The saying that beauty is but skin deep is but a skin deep saying.
~John Ruskin
Humor
The hung over barber nicked the customer he was shaving.
Annoyed, the customer quipped, “See what happens when you drink too much?”
“Yeah,” said the barber, “it makes skin more sensitive.”
Anti-Aging Psychologist Dr. Michael Brickey is keynote speaker and author of the Oprah-featured book, Defy Aging and 52 baby steps to Grow Young. The books and his Reverse Aging anti-aging hypnosis CDs comprise his anti-aging system.
