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| Kyra Skin Care - Tropical Smoothee Hand Crème |

Beauty & the Beasts
If you follow any sort of personal care or beauty product
regime everyday, the odds are excellent that you have exposed
yourself to 200 different chemicals before you step out of the
door to go to work!
However, as an American consumer, you probably have every
confidence that someone in a government lab coat has checked out
these products you use and the substances in them. Right? Well, not
exactly.
"You know more about the ingredients in your dog's flea collar
than you know about the toxicity of whatever you're putting on your
skin," argues David Wallinga, a senior scientist with the
Natural Resources Defense Council in Washington,
D.C.
Do Hairdressers Glow in the Dark . . .?
A study done at Cornell University and published in the
Journal of Toxicology & Environmental
Health, maintains that cosmetologists are two
times more apt to have mutagens in their urine than
are dental workers, who handle mercury and other toxic chemicals
every day!
Donald Lisk, study leader, Cornell Professor and head of
their Toxic Chemicals Laboratory discovered that almost
40% of the group studied had what were identified as
MUTAGENS in their urine. Lisk feels that many of the cosmetic
chemicals to which cosmetologists and their clients are exposed to,
are a very serious threat!
And What About Us . . .?
The law governing cosmetics says that they may not contain
"harmful substances." But how the tests for such substances are
conducted is left up to the companies. There are no standards set by
the FDA for proper safety testing - and no requirements that
companies do testing at all.
With the exception of a handful of banned chemicals,
manufacturers can add almost any ingredients to those revitalizing
eye creams, vitamin-stuffed conditioners, wrinkle-removing lotions,
and kiss-resistant lipsticks. If questions arise about their safety,
the burden is on the government to prove the product is unsafe.
One must be aware that the cosmetic division of the FDA, which
has only 1% of the total FDA budget and just 30 employees - rarely
challenges a product.
Consumers must be made aware of the real danger that arises from
the many potentially harmful chemicals used in beauty products,
because they do have a molecular weight that is low enough that they
can penetrate the internal systems of the body. How much do you
really know about your products?
The Top Cosmetic Chemistry Beasts
UREA (IMIDAZOLIDINYL) & DMDM HYDANTOIN
This substance is one of many preservatives that release
formaldehyde. According to the Mayo Clinic, formaldehyde can
irritate the respiratory system, cause skin reactions and trigger
heart palpitations. Exposure to formaldehyde may cause joint pain,
allergies, depression, headaches, chest pains, ear infections,
chronic fatigue, dizziness and loss of sleep. It can also aggravate
coughs and colds and trigger asthma. Serious side effects include
weakening the immune system and cancer.
Formaldehyde releasing ingredients are very common in nearly all
store brands of skin, body and hair care, antiperspirants, and nail
polish.
MINERAL OIL
Baby oil is 100% Mineral Oil. Mineral oils have been found to be
probably the single greatest cause of breakouts in women who use a
new product. Manufactured from crude oil, mineral oil is basically a
mixture of liquid hydrocarbon separated from petroleum. Dr. T.G.
Randolph, an allergist, has found that this and many other
cosmetic chemicals cause petrochemical hypersensitivity.
Used in many skin care products, this ingredient actually coats
the skin just like plastic wrap, disrupting the skin's natural
immune barrier and inhibiting its ability to breathe and absorb the
Natural Moisture Factor (moisture and nutrition). As the body's
largest organ of elimination, it is vital that the skin be free to
release toxins. However, mineral oil impedes this process, allowing
toxins to accumulate, which can promote acne and other disorders. It
also slows down skin function and normal cell development, resulting
in premature aging of the skin.
The allergic reactions can become quite serious over time leading
to arthritis, migraines, hyperkinesis, epilepsy and diabetes.
Mineral oil has a tendency to dissolve the skins' own natural oil,
increasing dehydration, and should be avoided entirely.
CHLORINE
Even though you will not see Chlorine on personal care product
labels, it is important for you to be aware of the need to protect
your skin when bathing and washing your hair. Use products which
remove chlorine from your skin and hair during cleansing.
According to Doris J. Rapp, M.D., author of Is This
Your child's World?, exposure to chlorine in tap water,
showers, pools, laundry products, cleaning agents, food processing
(fruit, flour, meat, fish, vegetables), sewage systems and many
others, can affect health by contributing to asthma, hay fever,
anemia, bronchitis, circulatory collapse, confusion, delirium,
diabetes, dizziness, irritation of the eye, mouth, nose, throat,
lung, skin, and stomach, heart disease, high blood pressure, and
nausea. It is also a possible cause of cancer.
FRAGRANCE
Fragrance goes straight into the limbic system of the brain.
Their have been scans done of people's brains before and after being
exposed to fragrance. Perfumes and fragrances are actually made of
5,000 hydrocarbons, which are all synthetics. There are no roses
pressed into that beautiful bottle.
When a person's body begins to break down, the first thing that
happens is they become sensitive to perfumes, room sprays, laundry
detergents, etc. We are actually absorbing and breathing these in,
and the Environmental Protection Agency lists them as causing
nervous disorders and brain disorders, and they are
investigating a connection between fragrance and multiple sclerosis,
chronic fatigue and fibromyalgia. Anything that a person is
breathing in should be absolutely natural, and if you are using
essential oils you must make sure that they have not been processed
with some type of chemical solvent like propylene glycol or
benzene.
PROPYLENE GLYCOL
Propylene glycol is used extensively for industrial and
commercial purposes ranging from antifreeze in cars, dairies and
breweries, to automatic brake fluids, to production of varnishes and
synthetic resins.
The industry uses it to break down protein and cellular structure
(what the skin is made of), yet it is found in most forms of
make-up, hair products, lotions, after-shave, deodorants,
mouthwashes, toothpaste, and is even in food processing.
Due to its ability to quickly penetrate the skin, The EPA
requires workers to wear protective gloves, clothing and goggles
when working with this toxic substance. PG's Material Safety Data
Sheets warn against skin contact because PG has systemic
consequences such as brain, liver and kidney abnormalities.
SODIUM LAURYL SULPHATE (SLS) & SODIUM LAURETH
SULPHATE (SLES)
Used as detergents and surfactants, these closely related
compounds are founds in car wash soaps, garage floor cleaners and
engine degreasers - yet they are even more widely used as major
ingredients in cosmetics, toothpaste, hair conditioner and about 90%
of all shampoos and products that foam.
Mark Fearer, in an article "Dangerous Beauty", shares that "In
tests, animals that were exposed to SLS experienced eye damage,
along with depression, labored breathing, diarrhea, severe skin
irritation and corrosion and even death ... according to the
American College of Toxicology.”
"Studies indicate SLS kept young eyes from developing properly by
possibly denaturing (dissolving) the proteins and not allowing for
proper structural formation. This damage was permanent." Still other
research has indicated SLS may be damaging to the immune system,
especially within the skin. "Skin layers may separate and inflame
due to its protein denaturing properties."
XENO-ESTROGENS
Women today have so many problems with their hormones being out
of balance with PMS and menopausal symptoms, and this shouldn't be
because it doesn't occur in Third World countries, China or Japan.
Menopause is a North American disease and it may just be that we
have created it through cosmetic use. We have a major problem with
hormone mimickers like xeno-estrogens affecting our endocrine
systems. A xeno-estrogen communicates with our cells as if it were
an estrogen. Many ingredients in cosmetics have the ability to be a
xeno-estrogen. If found in a shampoo, it can lower the sperm count
in men! And any exposure between the ages of birth to about six
years old can definitely alter a child's hormones. So I always say
"Mothers if you want your boys to grow up to be cowboys don't put
them in a bubble bath!"- Beauty to Die For: the Cosmetic
Consequence - By Judi Vance.
AND . . . ADD THESE TO YOUR LIST AS
WELL DEA (Diethanolamine), MEA (Monoethanolamine), TEA
(Triethanolamine), FD & C COLOR PIGMENTS, POLYETHYLENE GLYCOL
(PEG), ALCOHOL (ISOPROPYL), & MELATONIN.
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