How vain are you?

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  • Blessings2011
    Blessings2011 Member Posts: 4,276
    edited April 2014

    Melissa
    according to the CDC and the California Department of Public Health, squirrels
    in California can transmit Bubonic Plague, Tularemia, and Leptospirosis to
    humans. They can also carry Lyme-positive ticks, as well as flea-borne
    diseases. They do have the ability to transmit Rabies through a bite, but they
    usually die rapidly, before coming in contact with humans.

    Can we please talk about makeup or nail polish again?

  • Ariom
    Ariom Member Posts: 6,197
    edited April 2014

    Ewwwww, Gee thanks for that Blessings, good thing I didn't get too close to that cute thing!

    Back to skin care, I just purchased a serum and cream made by a young lady named Carla Oates, the "Beauty Chef" in Australia. I have been taking her powdered drink called Glow, for my skin, for some time and she has now introduced these 2 skincare items. They are all natural nourishing and good enough to eat! I have always been a sucker for cutting edge science when it comes to skin care, even though I embrace organic foods and alternative modalities, so this is a bit of a departure for me. My skin feels just lovely today, so I'll let you know how it goes. 

  • Blessings2011
    Blessings2011 Member Posts: 4,276
    edited April 2014

    Ariom - the products sound wonderful!

    A friend sent me a link to a new Obagi clinic opening up in Southern California, thinking I'd want to go. They have a great reputation, but several years ago, a Medical Esthetician sold me an entire line of their skincare, even after I told her how sensitive I am to preservatives.

    Well, I broke out in a crusty, painful rash all over my face. I finally figured out it had to be the sulfates in several of the products. I'd spent nearly the mortgage on them, but I did get a refund.

    Now, all I want on my face is something natural!

    It will be interesting to hear how you like this new line.

  • Ariom
    Ariom Member Posts: 6,197
    edited April 2014

    Thanks Blessings! I will let you know. I am really liking how my skin feels, so I will see how it performs when the cold winds start to blow! M

  • barbe1958
    barbe1958 Member Posts: 19,757
    edited April 2014

    Ariom, why do you say "it's a departure" for you when you are already open to her products? I tried a serum based product mid-winter this year and at first my skin responded well, but before I could let y'all about it, I found it to kind of build-up if you know what I mean. You use just a tiny, tiny bit of it but it still became too much. What I'd do is wash my face with a disposable cleansing pad and then while my face was still damp I'd put on the serum. I thought I was SO clever to not dry my face first, but "trap" the moisture with the serum. I mean, maybe it did do some good but I didn't become the "glowing" supermodel I expected!

  • Blessings2011
    Blessings2011 Member Posts: 4,276
    edited April 2014

    Oh, barbe - What are you talking about? You ARE a glowing supermodel!!!! 

  • DeliriumPie
    DeliriumPie Member Posts: 1,370
    edited April 2014

    I really like Isomers skincare. It did wonders for my skin even during chemo. 

  • Ariom
    Ariom Member Posts: 6,197
    edited April 2014

    Hi Barbe, I meant that although I eat organic and use alternative modalities, including this woman's Glow Powder drink, I have always gone for the science based skin care and not the organic more natural ones. I don't know why, but I just didn't think they would work. I worked for a number of the big houses like Dior and Clinique, their training skews your thinking about what will work and there's nothing organic in their products. I also worked for Clarins in the very early days, which was more natural, but the fragrance was too much for me. I have always used a complete skin care system from whichever house I was using at the time, fortunately, for me, for many years it was all free.

    DP, I didn't seem to get a lot of benefit from Isomers, I used it for a while, but I just had to use so many products. I do really like Skinn products and have used them for some years. If this organic one doesn't cut it, I will be going back to Dimitri's brand. I still use his body products and I will always use his cleansers, especially the night time one that you can also use as a mask, that's heaven and Dermapeal is my fave exfoliation product, I love that stuff. I love YBF makeup! Can't you tell I have a TV shopping "thing"! That yellow cream and powder are sensational and Stacy does the best brown eye shadows.

  • DeliriumPie
    DeliriumPie Member Posts: 1,370
    edited April 2014

    oh ariom I hate the skinn line!  I may have an unfair bias though because I started using it immediately after starting AC. I really wanted to like it and I still love watching his shows. I had stopped using isomers for about 6 months when I started it, so my skin was already not in good shape. I think due to the chemo the smells of the two cleansers were just too much and I may never get over it. The orchid cream which everyone raves about was just greasy on me. I still use some of the color cosmetics that came with the kits but I have about $300 of skinn sitting in a box waiting for the yard sale. I immediately ordered the vitamin c line from isomers and my skin ot back in shape. I think I prefer the all in one line better though.  What I don't like about isomers is that they have so many lines. Also Manuela has been looking a little shabby to me the last several times I've seen her. Her vibrance is what sold me on my initial purchase. I will go back and try some of the skinn stuff again just to be sure before I get rid of it all. I was really disappointed in the foundations too but I have severe rosacea and need a lot if coverage. 

    I totally loved that you mentioned dmitri, my TV sister!  Speaking of tv. I. Any live without Josie Moran argan oil as my moisturizer now. I was really skeptical of putting oil on my face.  But it is awesome. 

  • Ariom
    Ariom Member Posts: 6,197
    edited April 2014

    Ha DP, I do love those skin care shows and I know what you mean about Manuela.

    I love Dimitri and his  Collagenesis range I love watching the presenters try to keep up with him. He can be a bit cranky with them if they talk too much. I have used some of the new blue range too, but had no luck with his dohicky sonic cleansing brush or the sonic applicator for serums. I don't know what they were about, but I do love, love my sonic toothbrush, now that's an appliance that really works! 

    You are so much younger than me, so you don't need to use all the nourishing stuff that my almost 61 year old face craves.

    I haven't tried the Argan Oil, but my girlfriend is a presenter on our home shopping and she swears by it. Let me know if you find any more interesting stuff on your Home Shopping because if we don't have it, it won't be long till we have it here! M x

  • DeliriumPie
    DeliriumPie Member Posts: 1,370
    edited April 2014

    the big trend lately on the beauty shows are the at home laser hair removal devices. I am very tempted. Every time lately though, by the time I talk myself into the purchase, they are sold out. Tria is one that has been on a few times but I don't remember the name of the last one and it was a different technology. By the time the host was explaining what a great deal it was on how many pulse cartridges were included, it was gone. I was heading for my phone app at the time. Too late. I'm getting really cranky about my hair growth. Being in chemo for nearly a year spoiled me. I still has to shave my legs but more like twice a month. The Halaven must finally vacated my system during the last week because it is back to daily. And stubbly by evening. Boo. Has anyone tried these devices or have thoughts on safety?

  • TB90
    TB90 Member Posts: 992
    edited April 2014

    Hi DP:  Are you referring to the NO NO?  I have thought about getting that one as it sounds so amazing, but I am always skeptical.  Anyone with experience with these products??

  • DeliriumPie
    DeliriumPie Member Posts: 1,370
    edited April 2014

    no not the no no (lol). Although that one caught me eye first. It seems too complicated. These say they are the same technology used at the dr office for laser removal. They promise permanent removal with very little time investment. I've been seeing a regular commercial for the Tria lately. I see these on qvc. I wish I could remember the name of the last one I saw. It seemed the best. They are pricy. $300- $500. I heard the no no is $200. But of course the sell is that that is less than one professional treatment. 

  • Ariom
    Ariom Member Posts: 6,197
    edited April 2014

    I haven't tried, or been tempted to buy the hair removal system, fortunately for me, as I got older the hair stopped growing so thick. I still shave my legs and under arms in the shower and only occasionally need to bikini wax.

    The hair on my head is a different story, I have to get it cut every 3 weeks and it needs thinning every time!  M x

  • GramE
    GramE Member Posts: 5,056
    edited April 2014

    on the NO NO hair removal system -- I have not used it or purchased myself but 2 of my friends did and they say it is not good and leaves stubble, and no permanent hair loss for either of them.   Both of them have not had chemo and the hair loss, so I do not know if that makes a difference.

  • barbe1958
    barbe1958 Member Posts: 19,757
    edited April 2014

    Wow! Here is little ole me using Oil of OLay or L'Oreal!!!! Since a teen! I do rotate in cleansers and toners though, but never, ever expensive. I just can't afford it, so I'm ageing gracefully but it's become a slippery slope...56 next month already! I wonder if Oil of OLay ever regretted having the word "oil" in their name? I bet they lost some market share in "the day"....

    GramE, thanks for the heads-up on the nono. I was tempted as it was costing me $20 every two weeks to get waxed with real wax. Then I had to switch locations and the new tech talked me into trying the cloth strip wax again and it was way better! So now I just do it myself at home and tweeze in between. I can go almost a month now.... but of course my hair is going white in areas and isn't so obvious, too. 

  • Headeast
    Headeast Member Posts: 619
    edited April 2014

    hello ladies! Just a small note to let you know my hair is still too short to play with it. I did manage to dye it. I saw a few gray hairs and decided it was time to 'hide' my age, lol!

  • jamonthis
    jamonthis Member Posts: 19
    edited April 2014

    Before my scare, I was a diehard fan of Dysport and Botox.  Shhhhh....

  • jamonthis
    jamonthis Member Posts: 19
    edited April 2014

    Also I spent tons of money on Skinceuticals.  That stuff wasn't cheap!  I even wrote my own beauty blog called "Smart Beauty over 30"  LOL.  Funny how mortality scares change priorities.  

  • Blessings2011
    Blessings2011 Member Posts: 4,276
    edited April 2014

    I have a fabulous hair-removal product... it's called MENOPAUSE!!! 

    Seriously... I shave my legs twice a year, whether they need it or not.

    I have a total of three little armpit hairs, and again, will trim them twice a year just for the heck of it.

    I do have a bit more soft blonde peach fuzz on my cheeks and upper lip, but not like guy hair...

  • Ariom
    Ariom Member Posts: 6,197
    edited April 2014

    Ha ha Blessings, you said it so much better than I did! LOL

  • Ariom
    Ariom Member Posts: 6,197
    edited April 2014

    Barbe, you look fantastic! Whatever you were using worked for you!

    Genes have a lot to do with it too. My Mother had fabulous skin right up till she passed at 78, she never looked her age, but she hadn't ever spent time in the sun, even living here in Aus, most of her life.

    My skin isn't too bad, thanks to her, but it is nothing like hers was, at my age. I have baked  myself my whole life in the hot Aussie sun, so now I have to pay the price. I have had several skin cancers removed!

  • DeliriumPie
    DeliriumPie Member Posts: 1,370
    edited April 2014

    hmm menopause, where can I purchase that? Lol

    While waiting forever in the BS office today I decided to go ahead and color my hair since I know I'll have for at least another couple of months. I spent $42 on hair products at cvs. Hopefully one of them will be the "one" that can tame this mess. 10 minutes left on the timer and will see how the color takes. If it's awful I can always wear a wig!

  • Ariom
    Ariom Member Posts: 6,197
    edited April 2014

    You crack me up DP! I shop like you do, buy it all and hope one works! LOL I do take advantage of my 30 day money back guarantee. I love that I can return stuff if it doesn't work or I don't like it. That is a bit of a novelty here in Aus. Returning stuff is discouraged here in stores these days. I worked in a big department store in the cosmetics department many, many years ago an this store returned anything and everything. It used to gall me when women would go to the US, buy Clinique for a fraction of the price it cost here and then bring it back for a cash refund. It was obvious that it wasn't our stock because we use the metric system and all the bottles were marked fl oz and ours are ml's. I used to burn over that!

    I was an early Menopause, at 38 it started and it was all over by 43, but it took some time for the hair to stop on my legs etc!

  • DeliriumPie
    DeliriumPie Member Posts: 1,370
    edited April 2014

    that's funny ariom. I am terrible at taking things back. Even when I intend to, I'll hang the bag on the front door knob so I will remember and it becomes a permanent fixture until cleaning for a party. And that is pre chemo brain. I always have lots of things with tags still on for yard sales. 

  • Headeast
    Headeast Member Posts: 619
    edited April 2014

    Interesting about the hair and menopause. I didn't know! 

    Question: I got a chemopause but still hairy, will that change? It would be nice to not to have hair allover the place!

  • DeliriumPie
    DeliriumPie Member Posts: 1,370
    edited April 2014

    I got chemopause too, twice. I guess that could count as store bought menopause maybe. Lol. Hair is back but no periods still. Oh the injustice. 

  • SelenaWolf
    SelenaWolf Member Posts: 1,724
    edited April 2014

    Chemotherapy threw me into instant menopause (I was 50 when I had treatment) and I am lovin' it.  No need for deodorant and I shave my legs about twice-a-year whether they need it or not.  The underarm that had radiation doesn't grow hair, the other does and needs monthly touch-ups.  No more hormonal, monthly migraines either and my allergy to chocolate disappeared.  Don't know why, don't know how, don't care.  It's marvelous.  I had a few serious hot flashes in the beginning, but - otherwise - menopause has been thoroughly delightful.  So don't miss Flo.

    Prior to chemo/menopause, I had what was called "allergic skin" and - although it took years and tons of self-discipline - I discovered that it just did better when left alone.  Tried a few of those full skincare lines in my younger days, i.e.,  toner, moisturizer, whatever, etc., but my skin hated it.  So, a little soap-and-water (usually Ivory) to cleanse and Aveeno's tinted moisturizer, some mineral (without talc) powder (and, of course, lipstick) and I was ready-to-go.  My skin changed a lot (for the better) with chemo-meno; it's drier, I haven't had so much as one blemish in three years, it's unbelievably GRAND.  But I've had to add sweet almond oil at night to keep it hydrated.

    And you American vainsters... why, why, WHY have none of you ever mentioned TANGER OUTLETS? O.M.G.  Shopped at one in North Charleston while on vacation: Brooks Brothers, Ralph Lauren, Coach, Nine West, Tommy Hilfiger, HEAVEN!!!!  All of that utterly divine scrumptiousness at outlet prices under one roof.  Still seriously drooling and weak-at-the-knees at the memory of it all.

  • barbe1958
    barbe1958 Member Posts: 19,757
    edited April 2014

    Seleeeeeeeeeeeeeena, I live about 10 minutes away from a Tanger outlet in Cookstown! Didn't you know that is now Tanger at the 400 and 89? It's expanding to 40 more stores, too!!!!!

    Had a laugh when I finally remembered to look at what brand my serum was (drumroll please.....).....Oil of OLay!!! hehehehehehe I guess it's just a trust factor, as well as a financial decision. That brand has done so well for me for so long I bit the bullet and drank the KoolAid.

    As for taking things back, my DD is the QUEEN of that!!! It really helps when impulse buying. She has NO shame! I've begun to be more like that as I believe companies have to know when we're not pleased or they'll just keep making the same old crap. Haven't had the nerve to return the "wrong colour" of lipstick, though. Seriously, that's MY fault isn't it?

    As for department store returns, I saw a lady try to return an electric kettle that had the coil marks from her stove burned right into the bottom plastic! She said it didn't work anymore...no shit! And another time I had a friend tell me that a couple came in to return some sexy-ish lingerie and there was obvious clitty-litter on them and the couple just stood there as if demanding someone to say something....how gross!!!!!!

  • SelenaWolf
    SelenaWolf Member Posts: 1,724
    edited April 2014

    Seriously?  There's a Tanger Outlet in Ontario?  Bonus!  Is there a Brooks Brothers there?  You just can't beat the tailoring of their oxford-style shirts and, if I order them direct via their website, I pay more in shipping and customs duties than the item usually costs.

    The Nine West outlet was having a "sale" when I was there: found a pair of black leather sling-backs for $29.99 and got a second pair (in taupe) for 50% off.  Cha-ching!!!  Then, picked up a leather clutch/wristlet for $15.00 that matched the taupe shoes. *blissful sigh*

    As for returning the lingerie... DevilGAH!!!

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