ADVANCEDBROWSE SUBJECTS
alive Academy
Alive Forum
Event Calendar
Health Retailer Search
Alive Awards
Alive Web Exclusives
Alive Australia


APEX Awards 2009

Find a store
Subscribe to our Free Newsletter!

Enlarge Font Printer Version Email It to a Friend
Replacing the Rough With the Smooth
by author Brigid James

It happens to the best of usthat moment of embarrassment when we peel off winter gloves to reveal skin resembling a dried-out riverbed or that moment of shock when we notice the soles of our feet looking like old sandpaper.

As we age, our skin’s ability to retain moisture lessens, and the hands and feet often suffer most from extremes in temperature. It’s all too easy to neglect the extremities during the harsh winter months, and skin becomes dry, rough, and sometimes cracked. So what can be done to keep that skin supple and healthy?

The Cover-Up

Working from the outside in, common sense dictates that we should wrap up well in winter. Invest in good-quality boots, socks, and gloves, and always wear a hat in cold weather. Try to resist the urge to warm up cold hands or feet too rapidly once indoors.

The Smoother

Moisturizing products offer a much-needed skin boost, and there are numerous plant-derived substances that act as excellent emollients. When scanning the shelves of your natural health care store, look for aloe vera, rosehip oil, and calendula (from marigold petals), long recognized for their soothing, healing properties, and jojoba and sunflower oil, which penetrate and lubricate skin.

Peppermint is a favourite ingredient for foot balms because of its soothing and cooling effect on skin, along with its pleasant, invigorating smell. Rich and protective shea butter comes from the kernels of the African karite tree fruit and provides a brilliant barrier for the skin from harsh weather, as does cocoa butter. Non-plant derived ingredients such as lanolin (from sheep’s wool) and beeswax also add a protective layer to the skin.

Try applying a rich moisturizer and wearing cotton gloves on your hands or socks on your feet overnight. Soak skin in warm water and bath salts prior to moisturizing. You can also add a little more elbow grease to the task by exfoliating with foot brushes and pumice stones. Soak the skin first, and avoid areas of broken skin.

The Inside Tip

The third line of defence against winter’s cold grip lies within. The essential fatty acid omega-3 is key to maintaining healthy skin and preventing dryness. One of the main dietary sources of omega-3 is oily, cold-water fish, including salmon, tuna (not canned), trout, mackerel, and herring. Try to regularly include fish in your diet, or take fish oil supplements. Thoroughly refined fish oils will not contain any of the harmful substances sometimes found in fish, such as PCBs and mercury. A vegetarian alternative with ample omegas is flaxseed oil. Ask a natural healthcare specialist for information on products and dosages.

Many vitamins also play an important role in keeping skin healthy, including vitamins A, E, and B2 (riboflavin). Eating a balanced diet, including a good variety of fruit and vegetables, is essential for adequate vitamin intake, and a multivitamin supplement is an important complement.

Following these simple skin care steps will prepare you to enjoy the best that winter has to offer and is guaranteed to put a soft spring in your step!

Brigid James is a British freelance writer and editor, currently based in Vancouver.

Source: alive #279, January 2006

Back to top

See Related Content
3-Step Cleansing
Excellent skin grooming isn't difficult, and doesn't have to be time-consuming or expensive. But it can be confusing. There is such an array of cleansing products, it's difficult to choose a cleanser that is just right for you.
Recover from Winter Skin
Have the winds of winter stripped the moisture, tone and color from your skin? Dry, scaly and/or itchy skin seems to be synonymous with winter. Low humidity can be a major culprit, but it is possible that low levels of vitamins A, C and B complex are to blame.
Winter Glow
Flaky is great... for a pie. With cold, windy weather outside and dry, forced air heating inside, everybody experiences a little dry skin now and then.
Beauty Treats for Hands and Feet
If detergents can remove the oil from a frying pan, imagine what they do to your hands! January conjures up visions of winter holidays, white ski hills and evenings curled up by the fire.
Taming Winter
Old Man Winter sure does a number on your skin. Cold temperatures dry the air and rob skin of moisture, making us run for shelter, where artificial heat finishes the job - leaving our skin feeling rough and itchy.
Tropical Topical
Unrefined, nutrient-rich shea butter offers many benefits for the skin and hair. It has been used to heal dry, itchy, scaly skin or scalps. The butter may also be used to reduce the appearance of wrinkles, age spots, stretch marks, chicken pox marks, and scars.
Is Your Skin Thirsty?
Your skin-your body's largest organ-acts as a barrier to the outside world, protecting your body's tissues and other organs from damage and infection. It also prevents loss of water and other body fluids and helps keep body temperature in control.
Essential Oils for Feet
Our feet carry us many thousands of miles in a lifetime. So when they are tired, sore, ulcerated, infected, cracked, dry, or itchy, they can cause the rest of the body stress from these constant irritations. There are many reasons for foot problems, ranging from dehydration and mineral deficiencies to diabetes.
Emu Oil
While it often seems that a beauty miracle is invented daily, it's refreshing when a new discovery turns out to be as old as the hills. When it comes to health and beauty aids, you'd be hard-pressed to find one with a longer history than emu oil.
Looking good
Quick tips to perk up down days We all have those days: hair looks limp and lifeless, skin looks slate grey, a pimple has appeared literally overnight, and the lips sting as a cold sore lurks.
Soothe Winter Skin
At this time of year, we're often greeted with the extra nip of winter in the air. Waking up to find tree branches frosted with ice crystals-beautiful? Yes. But, waking up to itchy dry winter skin-ugly!

Back to top