Why some of the most expensive serum are bad for you and your skin?

Lot of high end department stores sell anti-aging wrinkle 

serums for up to $5000 per bottle or jar!




PRICE TAG: $600


Is Dimethicone is BAD FOR YOU!

Those serums contains Dimethicone which is a silicone that just temporarly mask your wrinkles instead of treating your wrinkles and are bad for you because:


What is Dimethicone?
Dimethicone is what the chemists like to call a silicon-based polymer—”polymer” meaning it’s a large molecule made up of several smaller units bonded together. Simply put, it’s a silicon oil, man-made in the laboratory and used in personal care products as an anti-foaming agent, skin protectant, and skin and hair conditioner.
Manufacturers like it because it makes products easily spreadable, so you get that feeling of the lotion or cream gliding over your skin. Dimethicone also helps form a protective barrier on the skin, and can fill in the fine lines and wrinkles on the face, which is why it’s often used in makeup primers.
Is Dimethicone Safe?
The FDA has approved the use of dimethicone as a skin protectant ingredient in over-the-counter products, and the Cosmetic Ingredient Review (CIR) panel has assessed it as safe to use in personal care products. Some studies have found it to soothe and help improve chronic hand dermatitis, and to help reduce inflammation and irritation. The Skin Deep Database also lists it has have a low hazard risk.
For me, though, this is not a good ingredient to be using in your daily skin care. Like petroleum products, silicone oils can actually make dry skin worse over time. Instead of sinking into your skin and nourishing it from the inside out, like healthy ingredients do, it forms a sort of plastic-like barrier on the outside of skin.
Why Dimethicone is Bad for Your Skin
That artificial coating on the outside of skin causes several issues:
  • It traps everything under it—including bacteria, sebum, and impurities—which could lead to increased breakouts and blackheads
  • The coating action actually prevents the skin from performing its normal activities—like sweating, temperature regulating, sloughing off dead skin cells, etc.
  • Prolonged exposure to dimethicone can actually increase skin irritation, due to the coating property and because dimethicone is listed as a possible skin and eye irritant
  • Those with sensitive or reactive skin are at risk of an allergic reaction to dimethicone
  • On top of all this, dimethicone is a non-biodegradable chemical—bad for the environment
I also believe that using these types of ingredients on your skin can actually exacerbate skin aging. Why?
  • You’re inhibiting skin’s natural processes
  • You’re creating a dependency on the coating product, disrupting the skin’s own hydrating processes, which in the end increases dryness, making fine lines and wrinkles more noticeable
  • The coating properties may increase breakouts, particularly if you’re susceptible to acne, which will lead to scars and older-looking skin
  • You’re doing nothing to boost the health and vitality of the skin, thus letting aging take its toll
Much better to use nourishing ingredients that help keep your skin hydrated naturally! 
To avoid this ingredient, stay away from all dimethicone and similar ingredients like cyclomethicone, dimethiconol, and phenyl trimethicone.

Expert Ski Tips



1. Don’t Pick!—Though tempting, picking skin over the infected area keeps it from healing, leaving your 
skin red and irritated longer.


2. Cortisone Injection—This trick is handy for brides who wake up with a wedding-day pimple. The 
pimple can be treated with a Cortisone injection which
safelyand quickly vanishes the red bump.

3. Brightening Lotion—Helps camouflage the red/brown pigmented area surrounding the
pimple so it is less noticeable as it heals.

4. SPF—Sunscreen keeps the sun from irritating and inflaming pimples, reducing the likelihood of scarring.

5. Tea Tree Oil—Less harsh than benzoyl peroxide and salicylic acid, applying tee tree oil as a spot treatment can gently reduce swelling, or help prevent breakouts all together if applied to acne-prone areas before breakouts occur.