Friday Feature: Good and Bad Oils

I was glistening, a shiny sheen rescued from ash and scaliness and shelling out more money than I cared to. I had baby oil and decided to use that until I could get the money to replenish my favorite body butter. But when I noticed that baby oil is mineral oil and mineral oil is petroleum (or petrolatum) which comes from crude oil (as in the BP oil spill oil) I decided I didn’t want to put car fuel on my skin. This is not just car fuel, which sounds bad enough, but a substance that doesn’t allow the skin to breathe and traps toxins in the body. What, then, would I do without making myself broke?

The Good

Extra Virgin Olive Oil—As you know, I use this in my cooking all the time. I love EVOO (as Rachael Ray likes to say). When in a pinch, I use this on my hair and skin. For it to be emollient, I have to make sure to spritz my hair and dampen my skin. EVOO is known for its health properties, including increasing good cholesterol and lowering bad cholesterol. This oil contains the fat that your body needs.

Shea Butter—Made from the nuts of the African shea tree, this cream had been one of my standards for about 20 years. I stopped using it when I couldn’t find a reputable vendor but searched it out again about two years ago when I threw away every product that contained mineral oil. Shea butter has worked wonders on my children’s eczema outbreaks. I use this daily to moisturize my entire body, including my lips, which don’t get dry if I fail to put on lipstick. It is also known to relieve sinus congestion and skin inflammation.

Don’t be fooled. Many products will tout that they contain shea butter, but when you look at ALL the ingredients you may find they also have mineral oil and/or petroleum. Look for 100 percent pure shea butter that you can buy from independent vendors, especially getting good deals online. The product I buy from my health food store costs $8 but from the manufacturer’s website I can get it for half the price. With shipping, I still pay less than what I do in the store.

Grape seed, cherry kernel, hazel nut oil—I found a botanical face moisturizer that I absolutely loved that contained these three ingredients. Each of these oils has medicinal properties, though some greater than others. What a great benefit I didn’t know about when I bought the moisturizer from this organic products company. Perhaps the healing properties caused my skin to feel elastic and to glow without feeling greasy. You know I was disappointed to find that the company went out of business. I plan to try to recreate my own and I’ll let you know how it works.

Extra Virgin Coconut Oil—I know of a few people who swear by extra virgin coconut oil. They eat it, using it in smoothies, and moisturize their skin and hair with it. My research shows that extra virgin coconut oil can withstand high heat (not going rancid) better than extra virgin olive oil. Extra virgin coconut oil is high in saturated fat though this doesn’t seem to negate its health benefits. It has healing properties, which includes being anti-bacterial and anti-inflammatory. Even with all the good reports about this oil, I have yet to try it. If it’s better than my beloved EVOO then I’m sure I’ll love it.

Other notes:

  • Use the above products or other essential oils directly or products that contain them (without mineral oil and petroleum).
  • Stay away from hydrogenated oils. Unsaturated oils go through hydrogenation, a chemical process that alters the oil from its natural state to preserve foods (like many brands of peanut butter and snack foods) and cosmetic products—and then become saturated fats (AKA trans-fats or trans fatty acids).
    Saturated fats have been associated with high cholesterol, heart disease and cancer. You may not be eating hydrogenated oils, but your skin can still absorb them from the products you use, including lotions and deodorants. So even though the product may advertise that it contains olive oil, if olive oil has hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated before it, don’t use it.
  • Extra virgin means that the oil was extracted by physical, not chemical, means and is in its most pure state.
  • What products do you use that don’t contain mineral or petroleum? What products do you plan to replace?

    Copyright 2011 by Rhonda J. Smith

    Friday Feature: Cooking on The Brand New Mommy

    Today you get your weekly health tip early. Check out my video demonstration from The Brand New Mommy on how to cook healthy collard greens. Even though you can watch the video here, there’s more blogger Karen Taylor Bass has written about me and you also just need to check out her blog. It’s such a cool concept with a cool look and feel and great information.

    Don’t forget to tune in to the Equipped for Life radio broadcast today at 3 p.m. where I will be discussing my book Daily Guideposts: Your First Year of Motherhood, and the host, Pastor Christopher W. Brooks, will be giving away copies. Listen at www.faithtalk1500.com or 1500 AM in Detroit for your chance to win.

    Friday Feature: The Benefits of Juicing

    Because of problems with my website, this post didn’t come through on Friday. Here it is for your good health:

    When I was little, school didn’t always come easy to me like with my sister. Sharon could see something and immediately get it. Some concepts just didn’t make sense to me, like long division. I had to work hard to master those difficult areas, but once I got it I got it. I think that’s what has finally happened to me with juicing.

    Juicing has been beneficial to me in so many ways. About four years ago I planned to make juicing a daily part of my diet. Examining my progress, I probably have juiced for a total of about a half a year over the last four years. Yup, pretty pitiful when I know that I always look and feel better when I juice. But this week, I have juiced a total of six out of seven days, something I have not ever done, and I feel great. I think this is my master week and I hope I am committed for life.

    To help you get committed for life (a lifetime) and life (prosperous health), let me share with you a few benefits of juicing:

    Get in your daily requirement of fruits and vegetables. With the change in government recommendations, we should be eating about 2 ½ cups of vegetables and 1 ½ cups of vegetables for a total of at least a total of five. Most of us don’t have the time or desire to eat that amount. When I juice I get in at least eight fruits and veggies a drink.

    Get nutrients quickly into your body. It doesn’t take long for your body to digest juice so the nutrients get in your bloodstream faster.

    Have more energy. When you get juice in your system quickly you get energy faster and you have it longer because your body is not working overtime to digest heavy foods. This is energy you can use to get your work done.

    Consume less calories without receiving less nutrients. When you juice you are not consuming the bulk you would when eating fruits and vegetables. Also, juicing fills you up so you won’t have room to eat as much solid food. You also get the nutrients that are killed with cooked food.

    Detoxify while getting nutrients. Sometimes people like to do water only fasts. This definitely helps to detoxify your system, but a juice fast is gentler on your system, detoxifying a little slower while still feeding your cells God’s goodness.

    Have an internal and external skin tonic. Juicing cleanses your organs, operating as an internal tonic. When your inside is clean, your outside beams. So, essentially, the internal tonic provides an external tonic effect.

    Give your digestive system a rest. As stated earlier, when you juice your digestive system doesn’t have to work as hard. Juicing helps your parts recover from their normal hard work.

    Preserve your body’s enzymes. When you juice you get a number of enzymes to help your body digest foods. Without adding enzymes, your body will tap into its reserve, depleting your natural levels. Enzymes also seem to help slow the aging process (Gabriel Cousens, M.D. in Power Juices Super Drinks, by Steve Meyerowitz).

    As always, there is much more I could say, but I hope this inspires you to do further research so your body will be at its optimum so you can complete the optimum amount of work for the Kingdom of God.

    Copyright 2011 by Rhonda J. Smith

    Friday Feature: Jesus & Roundup Two


    Photo Credit: 123Gold.com 

    Who has believed our message? To whom has the LORD revealed his powerful arm?

    My servant grew up in the LORD’s presence like a tender green shoot, like a root in dry ground. There was nothing beautiful or majestic about his appearance, nothing to attract us to him.

    He was despised and rejected– a man of sorrows, acquainted with deepest grief. We turned our backs on him and looked the other way. He was despised, and we did not care.

    Yet it was our weaknesses he carried; it was our sorrows that weighed him down. And we thought his troubles were a punishment from God, a punishment for his own sins!

    But he was pierced for our rebellion, crushed for our sins. He was beaten so we could be whole. He was whipped so we could be healed.

    All of us, like sheep, have strayed away. We have left God’s paths to follow our own. Yet the LORD laid on him the sins of us all.

    He was oppressed and treated harshly, yet he never said a word. He was led like a lamb to the slaughter. And as a sheep is silent before the shearers, he did not open his mouth.

    Unjustly condemned, he was led away. No one cared that he died without descendants, that his life was cut short in midstream. But he was struck down for the rebellion of my people.

    He had done no wrong and had never deceived anyone. But he was buried like a criminal; he was put in a rich man’s grave.

    But it was the LORD’s good plan to crush him and cause him grief. Yet when his life is made an offering for sin, he will have many descendants. He will enjoy a long life, and the LORD’s good plan will prosper in his hands.

    When he sees all that is accomplished by his anguish, he will be satisfied. And because of his experience, my righteous servant will make it possible for many to be counted righteous, for he will bear all their sins.

    I will give him the honors of a victorious soldier, because he exposed himself to death. He was counted among the rebels. He bore the sins of many and interceded for rebels.—Isaiah 53

    This is the story of Good Friday, good because our Lord Jesus Christ took the bad that we deserved. Yes, this is a good day to remember Jesus and His sacrifice for the sins of all mankind. This is a good day to make Him Savior of your life, if you haven’t already. It’s also a good day to make Him Lord of your life by honoring your body, in honor of His body that was bruised for us. Here are a few links to help you honor God through your body.

    Dr. Don Colbert on Understanding Free Radicals and Antioxidants

    Dr. Don Colbert on the Vigor of Vegetables

    Dr. Reginald Cherry on The Allergy Gut Connection

    Copyright 2011 by Rhonda J. Smith

    Friday Feature: Help for Hurting Skin

    The other day I gave some nods and a big laugh to Vanity Panic, a post by one of my favorite bloggers, Kim Cash Tate. The vanity issue was wanting beautiful skin and, of course, Kim had to mention her hair woe. What’s a discussion about vanity if it doesn’t include hair, right? Most of us who made comments agreed that we were dealing with vanity, but we all wanted to know what the healthy balance is between lack of care and vanity. I think we need to remember that we live in a fallen world and that some things just won’t be flawless all the time. Keeping this in mind can help us not to fret over a zit and get depressed from our hair. Like anything else we care about, we have to put some diligence toward having healthy skin and hair, but obsession is idolatry.

    As we work toward good health, I hope we work to heal, instead of just mask, our issues. So today I’m sharing some natural methods I use that may get to the root of your problems skin, whether you have acne, dark circles under your eyes, or oily, dry or ashen skin.

    Reasons The cause of skin issues can be external or internal or both. We must be careful of what we put on and in our bodies. Watch out for bacteria that come from dirt or other pollutants, makeup and creams that can clog your pores, and processed, fried and fatty foods. As I wrote in my earlier posts, stress and dehydration can also cause skin problems. Food allergies and hormone imbalances can be factors, too.

    Remedies

    Know your body. Observe what triggers your skin problems. Get tested for food and allergies. You can also keep a food diary to note how your skin reacts when you eat certain foods. Don’t just do this with new foods. Include the ones you’ve always eaten because you may have never contributed a skin problem to one of your favorite foods. Once you discover your causes you can make a change.

    Detoxify your body. You should make sure to cleanse your body at various intervals throughout the year—a major cleanse annually, a less stringent one quarterly, a milder one monthly, and even one weekly. You can do a juice fast, the Master Cleanse, dieter’s tea, all fruits and vegetables, whatever you believe works best for your body. We overwork our kidneys and liver, our detoxification organs, with many harsh foods we eat and they sometimes fail to flush the toxins out our bodies. A detoxification helps to flush out the lingering toxins that are seeping through our skin. As always, drink plenty of purified water to help the detoxification process and moisturize your skin.

    Pamper your body. Once you get the junk out, put some good stuff on and in. I eat plenty of onions, garlic, and yellow-orange fruits and vegetables and green ones too, which are all high in antioxidants and some in beta-carotene, which clean and clear the skin. I drink dandelion root, burdock root and chamomile teas to dispel toxins from, nourish and soothe my inflamed skin. I sometimes use Witch Hazel (with low percentage or no alcohol) as an astringent, which refreshes and helps removes traces of oil and dirt.

    I could say more, but I know this is a good start. I look forward to hearing how you’re doing on your healthy skin journey the natural way.

    Copyright 2011 by Rhonda J. Smith