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A Natural Approach to Dermatitis |
Dermatitis |
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Ten Ways to Dodge Your Dermatologist While in college, a
friend of mind went to a dermatologist because he had a slight rash. The
specialist told him it was dermatitis and issued him a nifty cream to put on
it. The visit cost my friend half a weeks pay, and when he came to
realize that dermatitis meant itchy skin, he went ballistic. You might be
able to save some space in your checkbook, and maybe even some time in the
waiting room, with a few of these ideas:
Shampoo less often. If you are troubled by
simple but annoying scalp conditions, this is really worth a try before you
drop the big bucks on a doctor. A physician I go to for once-a-decade
physicals prescribed not one but TWO antibiotics (one topical, one oral) for
a chronic scalp irritation. He also recommended a very expensive shampoo
and said to use it often. Nuts to that; the condition went away when I simply
stopped shampooing every day and went to just once a week. Use less soap. Not none, but less! I am not
suggesting that you become the poster person for vagrancy; just use less of
what everybody knows dries out skin. You use soaps and detergents to dissolve
grease and oil when you wash your clothes and clean your dishes. We all
know that soaps and detergents cut grease. Right! They do the same to
your skin, removing the natural moisture, oils and softness that no product
can truly replace. A naturopath once told me that one should shower without
soap, except for judicious application to personal areas that really need it. Do not trust sun
block. To avoid
sunburn, wear loose, cool, comfy clothes instead. Simple, no? You'd be
genuinely surprised just how many people still do not realize that the ozone
layer is not what it was thirty years ago. More ultraviolet light (UV-B
in particular) does in fact now reach us than it did a generation or two
ago. You can avoid practically all basal cell and squamous cell
carcinoma, the two most common types of skin cancer, simply by putting on
some clothes. I like a nice tan as much as the next person, but you
simply have to use common sense here. Look: if you were diagnosed even with
relatively easy-to-cut-out skin cancer, wouldn't you do just anything to be
able to go back and prevent it? Even wear a hat and a shady
shirt? Well, now is the time to start. Switch to more natural perfumes, soaps and
deodorants. For this, you may need to stop by your local health food
store. There really are many more natural, much more gentle alternatives
to the cheap, caustic, common cosmetic chemicals that contribute to creams
and other commercial creations' irritation of our skin! (Has the
Pulitzer Prize in Alliteration been awarded yet?) I know two people who
used to have numerous, small polyp-like growths on their neck and
underarms. These were no more than slightly unsightly, yet they were
hardly an improvement to the basic birthday suit. In each case, they
went away when the one person stopped using anti-perspirant deodorants, and
in the other case when the woman stopped putting perfume directly on her
skin. Read the label; even some "natural" deodorants are not
that natural. However, most are a big improvement for a small cash
difference. Build skin health from
the inside out. To have healthy skin, grow it. Your skin is an organ, not exactly
like your lungs or heart, but a lot more visible, and a lot bigger,
too. Your skin is, in fact, your body's largest organ. Eat more fiber; try a near-vegetarian diet; and how about a few days juice fasting? See for yourself
if a healthy inside equals a healthy outside. CHOCOLATE: Stop eating
it. It is no
myth but a matter of observable fact that if you eat a good bit of chocolate,
your skin will break out. If you cut out the chocolate, your skin will likely
improve. Part of this is due to dietary fat; part is due to chocolate
itself. Try and see. Hershey's common stock will do well without your
help. Use less skin and hair
glop. You'll save
a pile of cash, and if you follow the suggestions above, you won't need all
that the stuff anyway. I remember a neat Take your vitamins. Your skin loves vitamin E
(internally and externally), the B-complex vitamins, and assorted other
nutrients that modern diets so often lack.
Eat more lecithin. Lecithin contains linoleic
and linolenic acid, the absolutely essential fractions of dietary fat. As
adult Americans try to reduce their fat intake (generally a good idea), no
one has told them that they may thereby be creating a fatty acid
deficiency. Since the Reduce stress. A personal observation: I was
under high stress at one job for about four years, and I noticed four things:
1) my hair got gray; 2) my hair started to come out in the comb; 3) when I
started taking more vitamins, the hair stopped coming out; and 4) when I
started doing the work I love, my hair stopped graying. In my opinion,
I am less gray than I was in 1989. You can look at my untouched photo on this
websites main page, marvel at my toupee, guess my age, and email me your
answer. The winner will receive absolutely nothing. I am kidding
about the toupee; it's all natural. Copyright 2004 and prior
years by Andrew W. Saul. Andrew Saul is the author of the books FIRE
YOUR DOCTOR! How to be Independently Healthy (reader reviews at
http://www.doctoryourself.com/review.html
) and DOCTOR YOURSELF: Natural Healing that Works. (reviewed at http://www.doctoryourself.com/saulbooks.html
) For ordering information, Click Here . |
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AN IMPORTANT NOTE: This page is not in any way offered as prescription, diagnosis nor treatment for any disease, illness, infirmity or physical condition. Any form of self-treatment or alternative health program necessarily must involve an individual's acceptance of some risk, and no one should assume otherwise. Persons needing medical care should obtain it from a physician. Consult your doctor before making any health decision. Neither the author nor the webmaster has authorized the use of their names or the use of any material contained within in connection with the sale, promotion or advertising of any product or apparatus. Single-copy reproduction for individual, non-commercial use is permitted providing no alterations of content are made, and credit is given. |
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