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The Aviation of Achievement

Laser Facial Hair Removal - the Best Way to Remove Facial Hair
Thursday August 14th 2008, 1:44 am
Filed under: Building Beauty, Misc Stuff, The Fantasy Universe

Excess facial hair is usually very irritating especially for women. Wanton facial hair on women usually grows on the mustache area (upper lip), chin and sometimes the side of the head and the upper part of the neck. The most commonly used facial hair removal methods that women use are tweezers, creams and wax. However, such conventional facial hair removal methods are not the optimum. Tweezers and waxing can cause skin damage on the long run and can also cause scars if used a lot. But if your facial hair grows at a snail’s pace, like 2-3 hairs every 2 months then it’s okay to use tweezers and waxing. Otherwise, you should resort to another permanent and safer facial hair removal technique.

Removing facial hair with Laser is an excellent method. However, before thinking of undertaking it you have to confer with your doctor who would be able to give you advice regarding your skin and hair nature. Moreover, when undergoing laser facial hair removal you have to make sure that the person who will be treating you is adequately experienced. You might even need to ask him about how many patients he treated and whether this laser machine is his or he rents it. Such questions can be good proof of his proficiency and experience to make you assured enough that your face would not be harmed.

More about laser hair removal on this site.

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Back to School With Clear Skin
Wednesday June 18th 2008, 8:05 pm
Filed under: Building Beauty

Backpack? Check. Notebooks? Check. Ink-pens? Check. Clear Skin? Mommmm!

If you are anything like three-fourths of the parents Harris Interactive for the American Counseling Association recently surveyed, you are actively involved in helping your teenager treat acne.

While getting everything in order for back to school adds enough stress, the last thing your teen may want to deal with is a pimply face. So how can you send Mr. or Miss “But I have to have it now!” off to school with no fuss and no zits?

Even though little Caitlin’s initial reaction may be to bolt for the strongest acne soap she can find, this is not the way to go. As dermatologist Alanna F. Bree, MD at the Saint Louis University School of Medicine, warns, “many of the zealous measures people take can make the blemishes worse.”

Then again, after visiting a dermatologist to determine if acne prescriptions like tretinoin (Retin-A), antibiotics or isotretinoin are in order, it will take weeks before your teen sees a marked improvement in their skin’s condition.

Next, perhaps a laser visit may zap the zits away. Yet, Jerome Garden, MD, of the department of dermatology at Northwestern University in Chicago advises, “These are highly expensive cash procedures requiring multiple visits to the office.”

Dr. Spencer added, “I think light-based therapy for acne represents one more tool in the tool chest, but it’s quite unreasonable for it to be the first thing that pops into your head.”

Your best bet for preventative acne measures can start in your own home. Author of Acne Messages: Crack the Code of Your Zits and Say Goodbye to Acne, Naweko San-Joyz, offers three steps to help your teenager get clearer skin fast.

First, after gently cleansing the face, swipe it with a cotton-ball drenched in apple-cider vinegar to help remove excess fatty acid deposits that may provoke zits.

Second, cook a bowl of raw (not instant) oatmeal and let it cool. Mix the oatmeal with one teaspoon of honey and then apply it to the face as a mask for 15-20 minutes, then rinse it off. The mask helps dry up existing zits, exfoliate the skin and reduce overpopulation by p. acnes bacteria.

Third, San-Joyz suggests blending a smoothie of fresh carrots, celery, pineapple and a teaspoon of wheat germ. The nutrients served up in this cocktail help compensate for shortages in vitamins A, B, C and E and the mineral zinc that can sometimes trigger acne.

As the first and final stand against teenage acne, dermatologist Dr. Alan Rockoff Brookline’s offers this encouragement, “Once you rule out conditions that require urgent intervention (pretty easy in dermatology), often the best thing is to relax, and wait.”

For now, give your teenager the assurance that the acne can improve after de-stressing and if that fails, give you local dermatologist a ring.

Sources: eSkin and Allergy News

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Preventing Baldness
Monday April 28th 2008, 5:15 pm
Filed under: Building Beauty

Typically, baldness is the result of hair that sheds but is supposed to grow back naturally. If this occurs, a lifestyle check and consultation with a doctor and nutritionist may help isolate the causes and prevent a progression of the problem. Even though it has not been scientifically established that stress and emotional trauma are contributory factors, there seems to be evidence that the elimination of these does arrest excessive hair loss.

Certain shampoos, conditioners, and hair oils may be fundamentally unsuitable for certain users while they benefit others. If continued hair loss is noted with any particular product, it should be discontinued. Many experts recommend that shampoos and conditioners, no matter how effective any single one may be, should be used on an alternating basis. The theory is that the scalp grows used to certain ingredients and fails to respond after a while.

Scalp massages with nourishing oils, especially those containing arnica, hibiscus, and Indian ‘amla’ is definitely a step in the right direction. Besides being a great stress buster (which may be of peripheral benefit by itself) it ensures that the scalp’s essential moisture equilibrium is supplemented and maintained. This prevents dryness and brittleness of the hair that result in hair loss. A massage also ensures adequate blood circulation and proper oxygenation of scalp tissues. Oil massages are a time-honored means of preventing premature hair loss in the Orient.

If scalp psoriasis and fungal, viral, or bacterial infections are present, the medical elimination of these will definitely reverse certain cases of hair loss. In patients where the occurrence of these is on a chronically recurring basis, treatment will almost certainly prevent further hair loss. Finally, a holistically healthy lifestyle will ensure that, barring extraordinary factors, hair loss will not set in before Mother Nature decrees that its time has come.

Baldness provides detailed information about baldness, baldness cures, baldness treatment, and more. Baldness is affiliated with Vitamins For Hair Loss.

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Hair Loss Treatments for Men
Thursday April 24th 2008, 5:01 pm
Filed under: Building Beauty

Hair loss can be a real disappointment for men. It can make you look older than your years, and maybe even worse, it can detract from your appearance. If you’ve been worried about your hair loss and wondering what you can do, there are a number of choices. See stop-your-hair-loss.5×1.net for more information.

Some men choose to try surgical hair transplants. That seems like the permanent fix to many guys. The problem is that it often takes more than one round of transplants. That first transplant surgery will leave you with noticeable scabbing and swelling for at least a week. And then when the hair does come in, it can look artificial. I’ve seen hair transplants where there are areas that are too spotty or unnatural. Those results leave a guy with a hairline that screams “hair transplant”. That can be worse, you know, than the look of the thinning hair before the transplant.

Men who are considering a hair transplant need to be aware of that possible outcome. It takes a year before a second transplant can begin to fill in the bad spots, and even then a third procedure might be needed. That’s the downside to transplants. You go in hoping it will solve the problem quickly, and then you get a result that is noticeably a transplant and it takes years and multiple surgeries to correct. The problem seems to happen more often to guys with lighter colored or thinner hair.

One tried and true choice is to try a wig or a hair weave. That’s a club that many guys just can’t bring themselves to join. It’s way too noticeable and women especially seem to react poorly to it.

Another choice is to address the body chemistry that is bringing about the hair loss. Drugs such as Propecia are an example of this choice. For many men this avenue of treatment is preferred. It’s less noticeable and maintains the natural hair a man started with. Not losing the hair in the first place is a great solution.

Carefully consider the options for hair loss treatment. A good choice will make you feel better about yourself.

(c) 2006

The author writes regularly on a variety of heath and personal care topics. See http://stop-your-hair-loss.5×1.net for more information.

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Birth Control: Lowers Costs
Sunday April 13th 2008, 9:45 pm
Filed under: Building Beauty, Mean And Lean: Fitness Infos, Medicine + Life
Birth control is a controversial subject. In recent years, there has been a growing movement in the United States to restrict a woman’s access to contraceptives. Birth control is one area where generic drugs have made a big impact. Recent survey shows that over 60 million women worldwide have used birth control pills to prevent unwanted pregnancy.

Progestins combined with estrogens comprise the oral contraceptives that inhibit ovulation by affecting the hypothalamus and pituitary. Progestin-only pills and injections are also effective contraceptives that work by forming a thick cervical mucus that is relatively impenetrable to sperm. Progestin-only pills may not make you feel as sick as pills containing estrogen and progestin. If you throw up within one hour of taking the pills, you may need to take another dose.

Hormonal contraception could include combined oral or injectable contraceptives, progestin-only oral or injectable contraceptives, implants, or intrauterine devices. Study participants included breastfeeding women of any age or parity who desired contraception. Hormone birth control works very well. It prevents pregnancy by stopping monthly egg production. Hormones are the body’s chemical messengers that regulate a woman’s fertility cycle. They trigger the release of an egg (ovulation), stimulate the production of sperm-friendly cervical mucus and make sure the uterus is prepared to nurture a fertilized egg.

Prescription methods of birth control include medically prescribed hormones , barriers, or devices. There are many prescription options available to women. Prescription-free BC in the US and UK would cost the consumer more than if they required a prescription. The point is understood-that everyone should have BC that wants it.

Click Here for Discount Generic Yasmin

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Skin Care - Tricking You, Not Your Skin
Thursday April 03rd 2008, 9:49 pm
Filed under: Building Beauty

Your skin is a very clever organ. No matter which in the arsenal of developments in anti aging skin care products are proudly emblazoned on the bottle and in the marketing literature, your skin knows the truth. And whilst it may play the game for a little while, plumping up nicely to give the appearance of looking younger, more even, and less lined, this is only a temporary, somewhat cosmetic ruse. It is actually a biological trick of the light, a chimeraic nod to the quest for youth. Don’t be fooled.

Skin care is big business. And there’s nothing wrong with that. But whilst its highly entertaining to browse through the shelves and try out the latest pedigree of skin cream, these foot soldiers in the war on wrinkles meet a somewhat tenacious and uncooperative foe in our skin.

Our skin. This multi-layered emissary to the outside world, bearer of our expressions, our joys, our grief. Guard against the invisible tide of micro-organisms that seek to infiltrate our body’s first defence against disease and infection. This complex array of cells that every month regenerate and shed, within the constraints of age and the quality of our diet. Our skin is a hard worker and much unappreciated. Often barely nourished despite the money spent on technological promises, we still hope the dream of youth slipping away will be restored.

There is a way to slow the process of aging. But not by applying high tech anti aging creams. By understanding exactly what our skin is, we can find better ways of giving it what it needs. And consequently, we will find ourselves with what we want - more youthful skin.

Our skin is composed of 3 main layers. The outside layer that we apply our anti aging skin care products to is the epidermis. This in turn has 4 to 5 layers, depending on where it is in the body, and whether there is a lot of hair on it. The top layer of the epidermis, the stratum corneum, serves as a barrier. This is where the cells are continually shedding and where new cells are ultimately pushed up to. These cells have no blood supply, and hence no nutrients or oxygen carried in the blood reach these cells. They are essentially dead in that they cannot engage in the metabolic processes that living cells do. But they do serve very important functions. By creating an impenetrable barrier, they keep out bacteria and other micro organisms, and are thus part of the immune system. But this very function also serves to keep out most of the expensive ingredients in anti aging treatments. And no matter how well an ingredient performs in a laboratory test tube, that does not necessarily translate to reaching the deeper layers of your skin, where the real anti aging work takes place. Most skin care products work only on the stratum corneum, and that is their downfall as anti aging secret agents.

The next layer down from the top is the dermis. This is the layer where wrinkles develop. The dermis consists of living cells, and they are responsible for the structure, integrity and elasticity of the skin. Here collagen is regenerated whilst existing collagen is broken down in the monthly cellular cycle. The production of collagen slows with age and factors like smoking, sun exposure, stress and inadequate nutrition. Other skin nutrients like elastin and hyaluronic acid are found here. Hyaluronic acid for example, helps hold water. As the dermis is composed of living cells, it has a blood supply, which transport nutrients and oxygen to the cells. These capillaries also transport cellular wast like carbon dioxide away. Here you’ll also find lymph vessels, sebaceous and sweat glands, hair follicles, and nerve endings for heat and cold.

Fibers from the dermis extend down and into the next main layer, the subcutaneous layer. They anchor the skin to it. The subcutaneous layer in turn attaches to organs like bone and muscles underneath. Here are nerve endings that are sensitive to pressure, blood, lymph vessels, fat cells, collagen and elastin. The subcutaneous layer thins as we age, which creates a more angular appearance.

Moisturizers achieve their temporary effect by trapping water already in the skin. They essentially act as a seal, they do not provide additional water or ‘moisture’. The few products that actually work on the deeper layers of the skin are the Retin-A skin care treatments. Vitamin C, though popular, has not conclusively demonstrated that it can reach the deeper layers, the dermis. And even if it did, there is not enough evidence that it actually does anything there.

But the news is not all bad. We can do something, and its not rocket science. If we supply the skin with the nutrients it needs, with good, fresh fruit and vegetables, and good quality fats and protein, or even supplements as a boost. Then, and only then, will we stall the clock at a more agreeable hour.

References:
1. Tortura & Grabowski, Principles of Anatomy and Physiology, 7th Ed. (Harper Collins)
2. E Angyal, Gorgeous Skin (Lothian Books)

Rebecca Prescott - EzineArticles Expert Author

Acne sufferers, read this acne natural cure article for a great insight into Traditional Chinese Medicine and how they view skin conditions. And if you want a deeper understanding of why we get sick, check out this article on supplements and herbal medicine.

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New Updo Hairstyles for You
Wednesday March 26th 2008, 4:14 pm
Filed under: Building Beauty

Do you need a new hairstyle? If you have long hair, it is easy to get into the ponytail rut. Just put it up and go. But long hair offers a lot of hairstyle options if you are going to the prom, having senior pictures or bridal pictures made, going to a wedding, or just needing an updo for a formal party. You do need to know some basics of hair care before getting started with long hairstyles though. Knowing the best way to shampoo, comb, brush, and dry your hair and the tools to use can give you a head start in your hairstyle.

First, shampooing long hair is best done standing up, preferably in the shower. This helps reduce matting and tangling. You should choose a shampoo that fits your hair’s needs. For instance, chemically treated or damaged hair should be treated with a moisturizing shampoo and conditioner. Only apply shampoo to the scalp and then rub in circular motions to clean the scalp thoroughly. When you rinse, work the shampoo through the ends of your hair and this will also help with less tangles. Your goal is to clean your scalp, so it is not necessary to rub shampoo into the ends of your hair. Use several towels to blot your hair dry. Never rub wet hair because this is a major cause of matting and tangling.

Second, combing and brushing long hair can be difficult if you do not use the proper tools and technique. To make combing wet hair easier, start with a leave-in conditioner. Using a large tooth bone comb, start at the ends and work up a little, about an inch at a time, getting the tangles out. If you are working with dry hair, a large paddle brush works best. Again always start at the bottom and slowly work up to the scalp. When blow drying long hair, use your fingers to comb through the hair from scalp to ends while drying.

Third, you need a few hair tools on hand to make the perfect hairdo. They include a large comb, square paddle brush, bobby pins, hairpins, and elastic bands. The best elastic bands to use are covered with some type of material. You might not have known there is a difference in bobby pins and hairpins, but using them correctly will help your hairstyle. Bobby pins touch in the middle and are designed to hold the weight of your hair. Hairpins are made to hold hair in place that has already been secured with bobby pins. You can make curls and then spread them and hold them in place with hairpins.

There are lots of great hairstyles you can choose once you have mastered the basics and have your hair clean and ready. Braids and updos are perfect hairstyles for proms, senior pictures, bridal pictures, weddings, and formal functions. Many hairstyle professionals can style your clean dry hair in an updo in about 15 minutes. Having long hair doesn’t have to mean always wearing a ponytail. Talk with your hairstyle professional about some of the many hairdos that would work for you.

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