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7 Certified
Organic Skin Care Tips
Organic skin care is
fast becoming a booming business. When you
are choosing either skin care, personal
care or cosmetic products, you
should become a label detective.
This is the only way to ensure
you purchase honest and truly
natural, organic skin care
products.
1: Learn To Read Product
Labels
Be aware of the Rule Of Thirds:
The top third of the ingredients
label generally lists the
ingredients that comprise around
90-98% of the product. Most of
this is usually water. Read on
to find out why this matters!
The middle third generally
represents approximately 5-8% of
the product.
The bottom third represents
around 1-3%.
2: ‘Natural’ skin care is not
always natural.
There are two definitions of the
world natural.
The dictionary definition:
“Existing in or, formed by,
nature”.
The cosmetic industry
definition: “Any ingredient
derived from a natural
substance”.
Manufacturers commonly use the
world ‘natural’ on labels to
deceive consumers. For example,
“Cocamide-DEA derived from
coconut oil”.
Cocamide-DEA may well be from
coconut oil, but a synthetic
chemical called diethanolamine
is used in the extraction
process. It is known to cause
cancer. An ingredient is not
really natural if it has been
processed in this way.
3: Organic doesn’t mean what
you think.
An organic certification on a
product label is the only way to
guarantee the integrity of a
product. The definition of
certified organic is as follows:
“An independent third party
guarantee of an organic claim”.
Always look for a logo that
guarantees the product’s
integrity.
Certified organic products must
contain a minimum of 95% organic
ingredients excluding water,
salt and minerals, with a small
allowance for natural,
non-organic ingredients that
must comply with very stringent
processing criteria.
There are two definitions of
organic:
Organic chemistry is concerned
with substances that contain
carbon. Carbon is present in all
living things. Legally, the
cosmetics industry is allowed to
label any product that contains
carbon as ‘organic’. So if it
contains petrol, it is organic.
Methylparaben is derived from
petrochemicals, which are
derived from crude oil, which is
derived from living matter. It
is a widely used preservative in
organic skin care products such
as body creams, body wash and
deodorants:
So effectively methylparaben can
legally be labelled as organic.
Now, it is worth noting that a
recent study reported traces of
methylparaben in human breast
cancer tumours.
The second definition of organic
is “The sustainable system of
agriculture that uses natural
substances & methods to create
healthy nutrient rich and
fertile soils”
4: How much water is in the
product?
In personal communication with a
leading industry expert, I was
told what can actually be meant
when companies put ‘73% Organic’
on their labels. Basically
manufacturers can place a few
organic teabags in a vat of
water and let them infuse into
the water.
Because the water constitutes
70+ percent of the overall
product, the manufacturer is
allowed to claim that the
product is 73% organic at the
top of the label (remember # 1
in this article?).
If you removed the water, the
actual organic content of those
fancy herbal infusions would
probably be less than 0.05% of
the total product.
5: Be aware of inconsistent
labeling standards
In some countries, ingredients
that are not allowed in
certified organic foods ARE
allowed in certified organic
personal care and cosmetic
products. This represents a lack
of continuity or consistency in
labeling standards.
How can food and cosmetics
products have the same certified
organic logo when ingredients
that are allowed personal care
and cosmetics are not allowed in
food? Remember that if it’s on
your skin, you’re drinking it!
6: Miracle ingredients don’t
exist
Vitamin C, vitamin E, coenzyme
Q10, active copper and other
ingredients may be touted as
miracle ingredients. The fact is
that there is no miracle
ingredient for the skin or hair,
just as there is no magic pill
for curing illness and disease.
The quality of the skin is a
function of feeding the body and
skin high quality nutrients over
time and keeping the toxin
levels of the body as low as
possible.
When you use high quality,
certified organic products, ALL
the ingredients are active. They
are ALL beneficial and they all
feed the skin.
7: If it harms lab animals it
will harm you!
If you read books by Dr Sherry
Rogers, M.D, you will discover
that in order to give a rat
cancer or Parkinson’s Disease,
it is injected with some of the
very same chemicals that you
will find in your cleverly
labeled organic skin care,
personal care and cosmetic
products.
Certified Organic personal care
products and cosmetics 100% free
of ALL synthetic chemicals are
available from an Australian
Certified Organic company which
has passed the stringent USDA
Certified Organic standards for
food. What this means to you,
the consumer, is that the
products are guaranteed
synthetic chemical free.
Are You
Prepared For An Organic Skin
Care Routine?
Skin has many important
functions in our body such as
protection, excretion and
nourishing. It protects against
UV rays by absorbing and
converting them into dark
pigment to prevent further
damage. The skin is also the
largest excretion organ,
eliminating bodily waste through
its pores. The oily glands of
the skin
secrete sebum, which maintains
the elasticity of the skin’s
surface. The water skin storage
helps metabolic reactions,
minerals and vitamins
absorption.
Today, when people are more
concerned about side effects,
due to chemicals in personal
care, when traces of parabens
(preservatives) were found in
breast tissue, organic herbs and
genuine oils in skincare
formulations become a necessity.
The general knowledge about
herbs as ingredients in personal
care along with the
understanding of skin functions
can open unlimited possibilities
for people to choose a proper
skin routine, free from side
effects.
A natural and organic treatment
for the skin has the same
importance for your inner health
as a natural and organic food.
The natural and organic skin
care routine becomes the new way
of finding the right approach to
feed the skin.
Skin requires water, vitamins,
minerals, essential fatty acids,
proteins for its cells as much
as your inner body needs them
for a proper metabolic function
of its organs. This is the
natural and valid way of
obtaining a younger looking skin
for a long period of time while
keeping the skin healthy.
The name natural or organic in
skin care has become very
controversial since usually
natural ingredients are mixed
with chemical ingredients for
the sake of a nice, fluffy
structure and for a long and
strong preservation of the
products.
If you are looking for a nice
looking cream with white and
fluffy structure you will never
find it to be a real natural
cream unless it contains bleach
and/or stabilizers.
One or two natural ingredients
are not enough to start all
chain reactions necessary to
promote extended collagen and elastin production, or other
vital metabolic reactions.
Many chemical ingredients in a
formulation that also contain
natural ingredients can induce
oxidation of the last releasing
free radicals that - as we now
know - can damage
the skin.
On the other hand, chemical
substances can mimic similar
structures with natural active
constituents and compete for the
same cell receptors. The result
is the diminishing
effects of the natural
constituents.
Some chemicals are very
difficult to eliminate from the
skin due to their unrecognizable
structure and these tend to accumulate
in different parts of the body
and even block the skin pores.
This
makes the toxin elimination very
difficult.
In conclusion: Be very careful
when you choose a natural cream;
be aware when you see more than
one or two unknown names
(chemicals) in a natural
product. Be picky as if you were
choosing a proper outfit. Don’t
be tricked by fancy advertising
and sales talk.
Look as carefully at the
ingredients of your skin care
products as you would look for
side effects on a prescription
medication.
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