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Tuesday, March 6, 2012

How Often Should I Get A Facial?

How Often Should I Get A Facial?

It varies from person to person. Ideally, get a facial monthly because that's how long it takes the skin to regenerate. Try to have a facial at least four times a year, as the season changes. You may need it more frequently if you are trying to clear up a case of acne, especially at the beginning. Otherwise, once a month is plenty. You can overdo it.

The Basic Steps of a Facial

The Basic Steps of a Facial

  • Cleansing. A facial begins with a cleansing with cotton pads or sponges and a product chosen for your skin type (normal, dry, oily, combination, sensitive, mature.)

  • Skin Analysis. The esthetician covers your eyes and looks at your skin through a brightly lit magnifying lamp that reveal various skin conditions.

  • using a mechanical or chemical exfoliant. Mechanical exfoliation has a gritty can be a stand-alone treatment or part of the facial. It is generally an "upgrade" and done in a series.
  • of blackheads or whiteheads if you want it and need it. (It can cause broken capillaries and discoloration if done on sensitive skin, or done improperly.) People have different pain tolerance for extractions. They can be uncomfortable, especially on thin or ruddy skin.
  • Facial massage using classic strokes like effleurage to both relax you and stimulate your skin and facial muscles.
  • A facial mask targeted to your skin type (dry, oily, combination, sensitive, mature) and condition.

  • Application of toners and protective creams.

  • Advice on home skin care.

  • Who Gives A Facial?

    A professional facial should be given by a licensed esthetician with special training in skin care.

    How Much Does a Facial Cost?

    A facial usually starts around $75 at a day spa in a smaller city. Prices will be higher at and hotel spas. Special masks and serums also make the price go higher.

    Four-Handed Massage

    Four-Handed Massage

    Definition: Four-handed massage is a massage where two therapists work on you at the same time, mirroring each others' movements. For instance, both your legs or arms are being massaged at the same time. One therapist works on the right side of your back while the other works on the left.

    When done well, four-handed massage feels like you are completely enveloped in sensation and can be quite a wonderful experience. To synchronize, one therapist takes the lead and the other follows, but it should feel like they're doing the same thing simultaneously. It helps if they have a similar style and "touch" and have worked together before.

    Four-handed massage comes out of the Ayurvedic tradition, where it is called abhyanga.

    Four-handed massage is trendy and has been added to spa menus at many resort spas. (Some even have eight-handed massage.) In that setting you are less likely to get therapists who have worked together before. For a more authentic experience, get it at a spa that specializes in Ayurvedic therapies, like Elemental Embrace in Canada.

    Indigenous Treatments At the Spa

    Indigenous Treatments At the Spa

    Indigenous treatments are a spa trend that highlight local ingredients and therapeutic traditions -- ruby grapefruit scrubs in Texas, blueberry wraps in Maine, Lomi Lomi massage in Hawaii.

    Spas use a lot of creativity to come up with these indigenous treatments. At their best, indigenous treatments are deeply authentic, giving you experiences you couldn't have anywhere else, like a highly skilled Lomi Lomi massage by a skilled Hawaiian practitioner. Sometimes they're a little gimmicky, but still fun.

    Here are a few examples of indigenous treatments:

    * The Arizona Biltmore Resort & Spa offers a Cactus Flower Wrap that uses prickly pear cactus extract to soften your skin, and a Sedona Mud Wrap that uses local mud to detoxify your body and nourish your skin.

    * Hawaiian spas offer Lomi Lomi, a healing type of Hawaiian massage derived from ancient Polynesian traditions. It usually begins with a blessing, and the massage is given with very fluid motions using the forearms.

    * Mohonk Mountain House in upstate New York has a Mohonk Red massage that uses towels infused with a witchhazel that only grows in the Shawangunk Mountains.

    * The Cliff House in Maine has a Blueberry Body Wrap and Blueberry Smoothie Pedicure and offers hot stone massage with stones it collected from its own beach.

    The Cotton House in the Caribbean island of Mustique uses tropical fruits in its Lime and Pineapple Extravanza. Fresh lime is mixed with sea salt for a body scrub, followed by a pineapple, yogurt and honey wrap to soothe and soften the skin.

    What Is Trigger Point Therapy?

    What Is Trigger Point Therapy?

    A trigger point is a hyperirritable spot that is painful. It is called a trigger point because it "triggers" a painful response.

    But a trigger point is more than a tender nodule. It affects not only the muscle where the trigger point is located, but also causes "referred pain" in tissues supplied by nerves.

    Trigger points are located in a taut band of muscles fibers. The trigger point is the most tender point in the band. The therapist will locate and deactivate them using finger pressure. One technique is to pick up the muscle fibers in a pincer grip.

    What You Should Know About Trigger Point Therapy

    It is used to treat painful trigger points that cause referred pain.

    It took a while to get the muscle in that condition, and it will likely take more than one massage to get rid of it.

    These points are often areas of chronic "holding" and you need to learn how to move in different ways to keep them from recurring.

    It will probably be uncomfortable.