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Ocean Treasures
by Chrystle Fiedler
January 3, 2004
For centuries, people have flocked
to the sea to take advantage of its healing and restorative
powers.
"The ocean is alive with energy and abundant sea life,"
says Susie Galvez, owner of Face Works Day Spa in Richmond,
Virginia and author of Hello Beautiful (MQ Publications).
"It's an abundant source. Sea products are rich in minerals
like magnesium, potassium, iron and zinc, all of which are
known for their deeply cleansing and antibiotic properties.
When we think of the sea, we think of health, invigoration,
the feeling of being alive and yet peacefully calm."
"To the ancient Greeks, the image of Aphrodite rising out
of the sea was beautiful because of the nutrients that the
sea plants had given her," says Linda Page, ND, in Healthy
Healing (Healthy Healing Publications). Today, sea plants
still provide beauty benefits. "They have a complete
spectrum of chelated minerals, which makes them easier to
absorb, that add lustre and shine to your hair and eyes and
improve skin texture and tone."
Thalassotherapy (seawater treatment) includes using
salts, mud, foliage, sand and water from the sea to
stimulate, hydrate and nourish the skin, making it smoother,
firmer and more resilient.
"Using sea products in treatments is both restorative and
detoxifying," says Galvez. "Now with modern technology, you
don't have to live anywhere near the sea to take advantage
of the wonderful health and wellness benefits. Your sea
retreat source can be as close as your health food store."
Seaweed's Beauty Benefits
"Pollution, stress, fatigue and bad eating habits all
affect the body," says Anne Mok, LaC, a certified Chinese
herbalist and co-owner of Cornerstone Healing in Brooklyn,
New York. This leads to vitamin and mineral deficiencies
that can result in broken capillaries, loss of firmness,
skin lesions, dry scaliness and more.
The good news, Mok says, is since seaweed is packed with
easy-to-absorb proteins, vitamins, minerals and lipids, it
can protect against environmental pollution and ward off
aging by nourishing and moisturizing the skin. "The seawater
in seaweed is similar to human plasma, so it's an ideal way
to get the nutritive benefits from the sea, vitamins A, C
and E, and the minerals zinc, selenium and magnesium we need
through the process of osmosis. Seaweed cleanses, tones and
soothes the skin and regenerates body tissues, offering a
new vitality and helping to maintain a youthful appearance.
It also improves circulation, which has a positive effect on
local fatty overloads and helps maintain the tone of the
tissue." No wonder seaweed is used to firm the skin and
reduce the appearance of cellulite!
Seaweed captures all the richness from the sea. "There is
no genetic manipulation, fertilizer or pesticides, just the
sea, light and the tides," says Mok. "[S]eaweed is ten times
richer in trace elements than land plants."
Beauty aids from the sea include:
* Kelp (laminaria), a large leafy brown algae, grows
along cold climate coastlines and can bring a healthy glow
to skin. "Kelp powder has exfoliating properties that make
it a great addition to a facial mask," Galvez adds. "It
increases blood circulation and stimulates lymph production
to eliminate toxins. It's also a mineral-rich body scrub for
removing surface impurities."
* Crushed algae is often used in seaweed masks.
* Carrageenan, a gel extracted from Irish sea moss, is
commonly used as a cosmetic thickening agent. "It's a great
moisturizer that holds nutrients and water in," says Mok.
* Bladderwrack (fucus), a brown seaweed, is often used in
cellulite-reducing creams to eliminate excess fluid from the
skin.
A Seaweed Beauty Routine
Incorporating the benefits of seaweed into your beauty
routine is easy. You can "purchase dehydrated seaweed at a
natural food store to make your bath a mini-ocean," says
Janice Cox, author of Natural Beauty at Home (Henry Holt &
Co). "Fill the tub to the point that you're covered when you
lie down," says Dr. Page. "The idea is to make your body
sweat, to open your pores, release toxins and take in the
sea nutrient benefits by osmosis. Boost the effect with a
few drops of aromatherapy bath oils like rosemary and
lavender. It'll help hold the heat in and improve your
cleansing program." Rinse off and "you'll feel your skin
tighten, due to the high iodine content of the seaweed,"
says Cox. "Your skin should also feel softer and firmer."
Seaweed and algae body wraps are ideal ways to beautify
the skin, rid your body of toxins and boost well-being and
health. "It starts a program of detoxification very
rapidly," says Dr. Page, who has also written
Detoxification: All You Need to Know (Healthy Healing
Publications). "It's amazing how it encourages weight loss
and cellulite reduction." "Seaweed wraps are the most
effective cellulite treatments," says Mok. "Seaweed and
seaweed mud, especially, stimulate the cells to improve
cellular activity and increase the efficiency of lymphatic
fluid, which helps break down toxic deposits that can result
in cellulite.
"It's excellent conditioning for the skin and leaves it
soft and glowing," says Claudia Spagnolo, spa director for
the DeFranco Spagnolo Salon and Day Spa in Great Neck, New
York.
Revitalize With Sea Salts
Sea salts contain minerals-such as calcium, potassium,
magnesium, sodium, iron, sulphur, phosphorus and
chlorine-that have a delightfully rejuvenating and
revitalizing effect on skin.
"Sea salts enhance the youthful healthy glow of the
skin," says Spagnolo. "It creates a deep pore cleansing from
shoulder to toe, removing rough, dry skin, helping to purify
and slough off dead skin cells. It's great for an all-over
exfoliation, and leaves the skin smooth and refreshed."
"Sea salt has wonderful drawing properties, promoting the
removal of toxins from the skin," says Galvez, author of Ooh
La La Effortless Beauty (MQ Publications). "It's high in
mineral content and nourishes the body."
Sea salt also "guards against moisture loss, so it's
ideal for dry skin and helps prevent aging," says Mok. In
addition, it can be used to treat acne, eczema and
psoriasis. Often done before a massage in spas, a "salt
glow," which uses a vigorous scrub of coarse sea salts mixed
with essential oils, rejuvenates and revitalizes the skin.
Sea salt is also readily available at health food stores so
you can do the same at home.
Mineral-rich Dead Sea salts pack a salinity of 32%. "When
bathing with Dead Sea salt you don't even need to use soap
because the minerals remove redundant fat and dirt," says
Mok. Dead Sea minerals are often used in shampoos,
conditioners and shower gels. "Galvez adds, "Dead Sea mud
mineral and vitamin content is very close to that of humans,
and therefore treatments using the mud penetrate deeply."
Ah! Home Spa
It's easy to turn your bathroom into an oasis of calm and
create a private spa to call your own.
For a sea cure bath, mix together half a pound of sea
salt and a pound of baking soda, add to a warm water bath
and soak until the water has cooled, says Mok. "It's
excellent for soothing itchy and dry skin and helps detoxify
by pulling out toxic waste from the pores." Aromatherapy
oils, like lavender, make your soak in the tub even more
relaxing and luxurious. "It's a great way to de-stress after
a long day at work."
A seaweed wrap can release water retention and leave legs
looking their sleekest, notes Mok. "Just soak legs in a bath
of warm water and Epsom salts for 5 minutes, then pat dry.
Apply a seaweed mask and wrap legs with plastic wrap and a
warm towel. Relax for 15 minutes. Remove towel and plastic
wrap and rinse."
You can also try a sea salt rub by mixing two cups of
kosher salt with one cup of olive oil until it forms a thick
paste. (Be careful: the oil is slippery.) "While in the tub
or shower, massage it into your skin using long strokes
toward the heart, starting with your feet," says Galvez.
Rinse off with warm water, use a soft washcloth to remove
any residue, pat dry and apply moisturizer. "Your skin will
be silky smooth and wonderfully hydrated." To create a spa
environment at home, details make all the difference. "Think
of your favorite beach get-a-way and go with an ocean
theme," says Cox. "Include something for each of the
senses." For example, put on a CD that has nature sounds. To
capture the color of the water, use sea-colored towels. For
scent, light candles that produce the scents of flowering
plants (such as plumeria or citrus). Add "ocean" fragrance
beads. When taking a bath, "use shells to scoop out sea
salts or dehydrated sea weed and put them around the tub as
decoration," says Cox. Smooth on a moisturizer with a
sea-scented lotion when you finish your spa treatment.
When you make an at-home sea spa experience a regular
part of your routine, you reap a bounty of beauty and health
benefits. "In just 20 minutes you can have a mini-vacation,"
says Galvez. "It's cleansing and relaxing."
Then you will be ready to dive back into reality with
renewed zest.
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