Home Spa Secrets
by Carol Perkins
July 12, 2003
The luxurious feeling that comes
over you in a pampering spa atmosphere can be yours at home
without having to venture out to an exclusive resort. Lock
the door, put on relaxing music and fill the air with
luscious scents. Rejuvenation, regeneration and
health-promoting sensations await!
If you decide to indulge in a home spa, cleansing,
detoxifying and kicking back in an unstressed atmosphere,
you can prepare yourself for your spa activities by sipping
what Ann Louise Gittleman, PhD, calls a "Living Beauty
Elixir," a blend of eight ounces of unsweetened cranberry
juice with two teaspoons of a green superfood mixture "rich
in purifying chlorophyll and detoxifying antioxidants and
nutrients."
This drink, as Dr. Gittleman points out in The Living
Beauty Detox Program (Harper), "helps the liver... open up
the detoxification pathways....It's a marvelous cleanser for
the lymphatic system...removing wastes from the cells via
the connective tissue." The green food mixture that Dr.
Gittleman recommends includes nutritious items available
from your local natural food store that contain
chlorophyll-rich foods such as chlorella and spirulina.
Dim the Lights, Light the Candles
Setting a relaxed, soothing atmosphere is a vital part of
the total home spa experience. For the right kind of
luxurious ambiance, Aloha Bay's Bright Bouquets candle
offers three fragrances in one vase for a selection of
tantalizing aromas. Improving the experience, these 100%
pure natural wax blends offer about 100 hours of clean
burning for an seemingly endless at-home spa getaway
(1-800-994-3267, www.alohabay.com). Once you have your
candles lit and your bathtub running, you can boost your
bathing experience with botanicals from the sea.
According to Linda Page, ND, PhD, author of Healthy
Healing (Healthy Healing Publications), "Beauty treatments
from the sea are one of nature's most ancient beauty
therapies. In Greece, Aphrodite's beautiful skin, hair and
sparkling eyes were attributed to plants from the sea. The
collagen in sea plants is great for relieving wrinkles and
brown spots."
Dr. Page suggests making a seaweed mask by mixing 1/2
tablespoon of ground kelp flakes with a tablespoon of aloe
vera gel, leaving this mixture on your face and neck for 10
minutes. "This can help heal scars from facial surgery and
is also good for the thyroid. Over 15 million people may
have a low thyroid."
Another great mask can be made from derma e's deliciously
soothing Papaya and Soy Milk Clarifying Facial Mask.
Designed especially for sensitive skin, this soothing mask
helps exfoliate dead skin cells and clean pores of pollution
and debris while conditioning and nourishing for silky skin
(1-800-521-3342, www.dermae.net).
Seaweed Bath
Dr. Page also recommends filling your tub with seaweed,
which will turn the water a refreshing green. She says that
"packaged seaweed soaks can be put right into the tub, or
they can be used in a muslin bag which is placed in the
water. That makes for an easier clean-up.
"Fill the tub about two-thirds full with very hot water,
put in the seaweed (dried or fresh), which will make the
water look like a green sea garden. Keep the water filling
the tub slowly to maintain a warm temperature and stay in it
for about 20 to 25 minutes. It's great for detoxification,
and you can enhance the experience with a few drops of
lavender and chamomile."
The gel from the seaweed will coat your skin. When the
gel comes off, the bath is over and you have received the
full regenerative effects of the plants. When you use this
bath as part of your home spa, Dr. Page says that about 45
minutes should be longest you stay in the tub, and if you're
using stimulating botanicals like cayenne or ginger, take
these after the bath, not before.
After you climb out of the bath, you can give yourself a
complete manicure with Baywood's all-in-one hand and nail
formula made of dead sea salts, herbs and essential oils.
Appropriately named, Baywood's Complete Manicure cream
exfoliates and replenishes your skin with nutrients making
it feel soft and silky in minutes (1-800-481-7169,
www.bywd.com). Then you can apply soothing, nourishing
creams to your hands with DreamTime's Hand Cozys that soothe
away aches and arthritic pain, and comfort overworked hands.
Designed like large oven mitts, these fashionable gloves
make a perfect at-home spa treatment when used with your
favorite nourishing hand lotion. The warmth of the Hand
Cozys help your skin absorb lotion more readily, making your
hands soft and supple (1-877-464-6702, www.Dreamtimeinc.com).
Relax to the Max
You should further enhance your spa experience with
soothers like Intensive Care Capsules from Annemarie Borlind.
These Intensive Care Caps are a weekly replenishment
treatment designed to repair damage from sun and wind,
offering significant relief from dry skin. Each capsule
contains a high concentration of borage seed oil and natural
ceramide to deliver new moisture, vitality and elasticity,
while being gentle enough for even the most sensitive skin
(1-800-447-7024: request a free beauty newsletter;
www.borlind.com).
And you can reward your skin with Zia's Body Butter. This
dream cream combines mango and shea butters to actually heal
the skin while moisturizing it (1-800-334-7546,
www.zianatural.com).
Feet Time
An indulgent highlight of your home spa experience can be
treating your feet to relaxing rubs and aromatherapy.
As Frazesca Watson points out in Aromatherapy Blends &
Therapies (Thorsons), a drop or two of lavender and
chamomile added "to a bowl of warm water and soak(ing) the
feet for approximately 10 minutes... (can) help colds,
varicose veins, athlete's foot, sore and painful feet, and
swollen ankles."
The most important element of your foot soak, like
everything in your home spa treatment, is the calming and
relaxing effect. Healing and soothing, these treatments can
keep you on an even temperament in a hectic world.
So shut the light, close the shades, light the candles
and get ready to spa.
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