Do you want clear, healthy looking skin?
Believe it or not, bacteria play a key role in the health of your skin. This may seem a startling statement, especially with “anti-bacterial” products being marketed so heavily these days.
THE PROBLEM
Most of us have been carefully educated by doctors and companies to regard bacteria as microscopic enemies, waiting to pounce upon us at any moment.
Our best action, these people say, is to take antibiotics when we get sick and to “prevent” illness by slathering our bodies with anti-bacterial preparations.
The above approach is, in fact, disastrous to our health and to the environment upon which all life depends.
You see, the complex web of life on earth and in your own body would not even be possible without bacteria.
Bacteria in nature help break down and render minerals useable by plants. No bacteria = no plants = no animals!
In our own bodies, beneficial bacteria in the intestines help us digest food, they manufacture vital, calming B vitamins, they cleanse and detoxify the the digestive system, they support healthy immune function and help balance hormones.
Kill the bacteria inside an individual and you get a malnourished, sick, lethargic, and depressed or anxious person.
Such a person is an excellent candidate for medical and drug treatment.
In this condition of having depleted internal bacteria, a person’s skin and overall appearance also suffer. Acne, eczema and other skin conditions can be created or made worse as toxins inside the body push their way outward through the skin and as nutrient deficiencies manifest themselves.
THE SOLUTION
The answers to this are quite simple in fact:
1. Stop using things that kill your beneficial bacteria such as antibiotics and antibacterial products and anything containing chlorine. (Get filters on your drinking and bathing water. Use oxygen bleaches in the laundry and check out our Astonishing! powder for laundry, dishwasher and other household cleaning). 2. Eat organic foods and avoid anything with preservatives (which are mild forms of antibiotics). 3. Eliminate or greatly reduce your intake of refined sugars and carbohydrates, sodas, coffee, processed and microwaved foods, and alcohol from your diet. 4. Take probiotic, “friendly bacteria” supplements to replenish your depleted good bacteria. 5. Take an immune booster supplement to help knock out unfriendly bacteria while the friendly bacteria re-establish themselves in your body. 6. Take a “green-foods” supplement to supply yourself and the friendly bacteria the vital nutrients you are probably lacking. 7. Use only 100% natural skin and body care products without those toxic chemical preservatives.
Sure hope you find this information helpful and that you’ll pass it along to your friends.
🙂 Evan