Wow! See My Difference!


I can say without question or doubt, I love my younger look!

What I see is reduction in wrinkles, “lifting” of my whole face (- doesn’t it look a little slimmer?), and when I’m not smiling the vertical wrinkles around my lips are gone. The )( between my eyebrows is much less visible (hard to see with my bangs) and  I love the way my skin feels all the time now.  Even the visible blood vessels on my cheeks and chin are reduced as the surrounding skin is healthier, providing greater elasticity and support. Without the acids in my daily skin care, I don’t feel like my face is ”dry and tight” any longer – a lot more spring and softness!

Here’s what I’m using from Apriori Beauty:

~ Skincare regimen included using  Celloxylin skincare system daily~

~ The Derma Firm Illuminator five nights a week ~

Sugar Beet Crystal/Papaya Enzyme Microscrub three times a week ~

~ Drinking Lifeoxylin Elixir for internal cellular support ~

WOW!! I am just thrilled with my results!

Thanks for stopping by and “Makinig My Life Beautiful”!

XO Candy

Both pictures were taken by amateur photographers, left photo taken with an Olympus FE-370 camera, the right photo taken with an Olympus Stylus 790SW, and neither were touched up in any way.

Create Outfits From Simple 3 Piece Capsules!

Did you know that you can build your wardrobe with capsules? An understanding of clothing capsules as a method of assembling your closet one small step at a time is a unique and easy way to build your wardrobe in an affordable way.

Style Upgrade asks “Do you find yourself with a closet of clothing and nothing to wear? Garments that look great but don’t match? Clothing capsules will ground your wardrobe in reality, and allow you to enjoy your prints and special items.”

By choosing three basics from your current closet, and adding in three capsules of three garments each, you can create a different look every day for a month. Once you have done this, you can add other styled garments and accessories to round out your style, so that it is ever changing, yet comfortable and easy to choose and wear.  So, let’s get started!

YOUR BASICS ~

Your basics start with two bottoms and a top. The bottoms should be in colors that are considered neutrals. The classic neutrals are as follows:

Warm Colorations:  Ivory, Eggshell, Beige, Tan, Rust, Milk Chocolate, Grey, Camel, Olive, Warm Black, Navy and Jeans.

Cool Colorations: White, Ash, Smoke, Taupe, Wine, Dark Chocolate Brown, Charcoal Grey, Slate, Teal, Blue Black, Navy, and   Jeans.

In addition to a neutral coloration, your basics should have neutral styling. They should not have many details and they should not stand out. These are the types of garments you can wear three days in a row with different garments and no one will notice.

Think flat-front pants, straight skirts, classic tailored pants, long tailored skirts, elastic waist straight leg pants or slim skirt, jeans, etc.

The top should be the sort of top that everyone has. It should also be in a flattering neutral and should work with both of the basic bottoms.  For example, a white or ivory T-shirt or tank, a tailored white or ivory shirt, a classic blouse or shell in white or ivory. A basic top like this may represent several tops that are in your wardrobe. 

This was a fun assignment, as it gave me a reason to go shopping!  I purchased a pair of black dress slacks, classic tailored look with a slight flare to the bottom, a pair of straight legged dark navy dress jeans, and a white camisole type tank top.

 Now, I went a little wild with the tank top – it has a wide band of lace (about 6 inches wide!) at the hip and around the neckline. My thought (rationale) is that I can wear several different colors and styles of jackets over it, and have the lace almost like an accessory.  Do not even try to talk me out of this, even though it is not the ideal area to draw attention to for a pear! I feel that my hip length jackets will cover the sides (width) and the eye will go to the middle and up to a touch of bling around the neck!

Speaking of accessories, Style Upgrade suggests changing the looks while mixing and matching these capsule pieces, with a variety of accessories – chunky necklaces, bracelets, and great earrings, would be what I might look for. 

Now that I have a new clothing capsule, I can go back to my current wardrobe and select a few more capsules to build upon. I think I will do a warm weather clothing group of capsules and a cool weather clothing group, followed by an “elimination” of the items that did not make the cut into a capsule! This “spring cleaning” will allow me to select my ensembles only from my capsules – no turning back now!

Hope you enjoyed this lesson and I welcome your comments!

Thanks for stopping by and “Making My Life Beautiful”!

XO Candy

“Pass the Butter, Please!”

I thought I’d died and gone to heaven when I read Joette’s post on the benefits of natural, wholesome butter! My favorite “find” was learning that butter has antioxidants!! She so graciously gave me permission to post it here for all of my friends! Please click on over to her blog and follow her great homeopathic sense!

Content reproduced with permission from Homeopathy Works, author Joette Calabrese, HMC, CCH, RSHom(NA)

I love good food.  I mean, my favorite movies are Big Night, Chocolat, Julie and Julia. So when it comes to quality, I have a difficult time getting past the low-fat paradigm.  As far as I’m concerned: fat is where it’s at.  Now, not all fats are the same.  Think of the distinction between a Dunkin Donut doughnut and my Sunday homemade buttermilk waffles, drenched in maple syrup and raw spring butter.  One is fried in weeks old soybean or canola oil, the other is made with real butter from my local farmer whose cow’s name is Priscilla. Can there be any comparison?

Butter, Butter, Butter and Lard

The notion that saturated fats causes heart disease is not only facile, but just plain wrong.  Do you remember the Framingham Heart Study?  Well, if not, you ought to know that it is the mainstay of the advocates of the  low-fat paradigm. Yet its hypothesis has been turned on its head.  In hindsight, some 40 years after the study became public, the director of the study confessed that “the more saturated fat one ate, the more cholesterol one ate, the more calories one ate, the lower the person’s serum cholesterol… we found that the people who ate the most cholesterol, ate the most saturated fat, ate the most calories, weighed the least and were the most physically active”.

Can we deduce from the director of the lipid theorists flagship study that arterial sclerosis has little to do with cholesterol and fat consumption?  It certainly appears we can.  But there’s more to it than a study; there’s physiology as well.

Interestingly, arteries that are clogged are not choked with saturated fats, but with calcium deposits akin to lime.  This is not what we have imagined all these years.  Instead, we’ve been visualizing the fats from a juicy, marbled steak with buttered potatoes to practically travel from the mouth, to the stomach and then directly into the arteries.  It simply isn’t so and there’s plenty of evidence to substantiate this.  Despite repetitious conventional medical mantra and unsound pop culture advice we might reconsider the last 40 years of fat phobia to be a wash.

So, if butter, tropical fats, cod liver oil, whole milk, lard and other animal fats in general don’t cause heart disease, then what does?  We know that deficiencies of vitamins A, E and D are one cause.  Where are these vitamins found?  Why, in butter, lard, tropical oils and animal fats….the very food we’ve been directed to eschew!

B vitamins and mineral deficiencies are also contributors to heart disease.  These occur as a result of eating foods of commerce, such as soda, preservatives, additives and enhancers, instead of whole, homemade fare.  Vitamin B happens to be abundant in red meat and in organ meats.

There’s no doubt that stress contributes to heart and artery pathology.  The very nutrients that accompany traditional foods are depleted at such  times. Hence, during periods of stress, it’s prudent to take in more than the usual amount of nutrient dense foods that provide the greatest amount of animal and tropical fats.

Butter and lard, because of their antioxidants, protect us against free radicals and are therefore, preventatives for diseases such as cancer, heart disease, depression, infections and reproductive disorders.

I remember 6th grade science where we were taught that Vitamin D, the brain vitamin is found via three main sources: cod liver oil, lard and the utilization of sunshine.  In addition, Vitamin E, the heart vitamin is found chiefly in butter.  So if we want to benefit the heart and brain, the two most vital organs, how would we do this if we didn’t eat these perfect foods?

In colonial America, where people lived hearty lives often stretching to the 100 year mark, it was simply understood that saturated fats were a mainstay of daily life, particularly in the cold months.  These people lived agrarian or at least semi agrarian lives so they had whole, healthy foods available as daily fare.  Beef tallow and pork fats were rendered after the slaughter in the fall. Then these products were used to make biscuits, piecrusts and the like.  Which when consumed, would fend off the blues, respiratory infections and build robust bodies.  Organ meats such as liver, sweetbreads, kidneys and heart were a weekly fare.

Growing up in Buffalo, New York, we had liver every Monday night and as Italian Americans we enjoyed tripe or squid in homemade red sauce regularly.  We drank whole un-homogenized milk, plenty of fresh cheeses and beef or lamb regularly.   Today, spring butter is still prized in Europe because of its high concentration of nutrients.  It’s reverently stored and preserved in the form of special cultured butter and cheeses for use in later months.  The Intuits who had lives of extended longevity until the last century, ate a daily ration of whale blubber. Germans still eat a generous coating of lard on their whole grain rye bread with a slice of onion and the French enjoy ham with the accompanying fat daily.  Yet these cultures have low heart and cancer rates; or at least a great deal lower than modern Americans.  The connection? traditional fats, traditional artisan methods, traditional meals.

How can we reinstate these time-honored fats into our diet?  Simply eat like an age old European, like an old time American farmer and prepare like the finest gourmet restaurants in the world.  Unearth your great grandmother’s old-world recipes, toss out the canola oil, vegetable oils and buy a traditional cookbooks or learn the easy way, via my audio Secret Spoonfuls .  It’s where the answers get easier because it covers my own methods, tips and tricks that lightened my efforts to get authentic, gourmet foods into my family.

Get happy!  Ward off hot flashes, heart pathology, allergies, fatigue, and spring infections.  Eat like a true gourmet.  Include butter, coconut oil, organ meats, fresh milk and in plentitude.  Then go outside and take a walk.  Your brain, heart, lungs and even your arteries will thank you.

Joette has mastered the art of getting healthy foods into her children.  If you want to read more download her Digital CD; Secret Spoonfuls  Confessions of a Sneaky Mom – Get Healthy foods into Kids without getting caught. http://bit.ly/atv7A4.

About Joette:

Joette Calabrese, HMC, CCH, RSHom(NA) has practiced as a classical homeopathic consultant since 1997. She began her studies in classical homeopathy in 1986 and completed her five year degrees with the North American Homeopathic Master Clinician Course and the Dynamis School of Advanced Homeopathy in Toronto. She has studied with world class homeopaths such as Lou Kline, Vancouver, Jeremy Sherr, London, Jan Scholten, Netherlands, Andre Saine, Montreal, Richard Moskowitz, MD, California and Dr. Ramakrishnan, India. Ms. Calabrese is an official spokesperson for the nutrition organization, Weston A. Price Foundation, Washington, D.C. She is nationally certified by the North American Society of Homeopaths and the Council for Homeopathic Certification, accrediting organizations that are dedicated to maintaining high standards of homeopathy in North America.

In addition to regular radio engagements, Ms. Calabrese is published in Homeopathy Today, Treatment Options and is a regular columnist in Wise Traditions. She is on staff at Daemen College, Amherst, New York, and Chautauqua Institute, Chautauqua, New York.

Her CD, Perform in the Storm, a homeopathic first aid training tool is used at homeopathy schools in the U.S. and Canada and her CD Secret Spoonfuls, Confessions of a Sneaky Mom, or How to get Healthy Foods into Your Kids Without Getting Caught is devoted to nutrition for busy parents. Both are available on her website www.homeopathyworks.net.

Ms. Calabrese has been a vocal advocate for homeopathic and natural healthcare since before she and her husband, Perry began raising their three boys. She and her family tend livestock and honeybees on their homestead in ski country outside Buffalo, New York.

Follow her here for more timely tips, or get her free monthly newsletter that includes more Nutritional and Homeopathic tips.  http://www.homeopathyworks.net/newsletters.cfm

Nutrition and Physical Regeneration, Dr. Weston A. Price

Nourishing Traditions, Sally Fallon and Dr. Mary Enig

With great appreciation and love, I thank you, Joette!

Thanks for stopping by and “Making My Life Beautiful!”

XO Candy

How Your Life’s Passions Can Be Reflected in Your Dress!

Everyone has a passion for something(s) in their lives. Our passions set us apart and give us a reason to strive.”Sweet Peas, Bouquet, "Cheri Amour" by reneesgarden

Did you know that your passions say a lot about you and can help guide you through making choices of accessories and clothing?  Style Upgrade gives us an opportunity to look at what makes us “tick” and encourages us to incorporate our passions into our personal image.

Whether you’re a dog trainer, painter, boater, avid reader, antiques collector, gardener, artist, or any other of a variety of interests, you can reflect your passion into your clothing and accessory choices.  The items you select to create an ensemble can be reflective of your areas of interest.

 Style Upgrade gives us some examples of areas of interest and words that describe what may help in their decisions:

Travel:  changing, exotic, rich      Physics:  precise, mysterious, surprising     Volunteer: caring, friendly, approachable

Hiker:  nature, solitude, peace        Birds:  flight (freedom), sky, colorful             Ocean:  soothing, deep, everychanging

One of my passions is flowers, and when I have the time, I love to grow sweetpeas! I have grown many varieties of colors and types of sweetpeas, some large with short, thin stems, pastel in color, and others deep hued, vibrant colored with long, thick stems.  You can see my passion for flowers in the colors I choose to wear, and the types of fabrics I feel most comfortable in.

Sweet Peas by greenwoman46My favorite color combinations are pinks, purples and blues, periwinkle and violets.  I’m not a fan of oranges or greens, yellows or browns, so I guess you could say I like a “cool” color palette, reflective of my ideal flower garden.

Take a few moments and think about how your passions are expressed in your wardrobe and what other choices you can make to include them in your ensemble choices. What are you thinking?

 Ahhh, I love spring flowers!!

Thanks for stopping by and “Making My Life Beautiful!”

XO Candy

Candace Keefe Shares the 411 on Celloxylin MD and the 20Ex Acid Peel!

Hot off the press!

Here’s a short video of Candace Keefe presenting Apriori Beauty’s new

       Celloxylin MD line and the 20 Ex Acid Peel!

Click on this link:  http://play.goldmail.com/pph90k3xh4bi and enjoy!

Like what you heard? Interested in a sample? “Request a Sample” though http://www.useloveshareapriori.com

Have a Beautiful Day!

XO Candy

How You Can Use Body Proportions to Pull Your Look Together!

How do you see your body? All out of proportion? A little too much here, not enough there, hide this, show more of that??? Let’s talk about a way of looking at our bodies that will break things down then build them back up in a more balanced way!

Style Upgrade suggests we divide our body shapes into four segments:

Upper Body:  head and shoulders.

Upper Middle Body:  bust and waist.

Lower Middle Body:  bottom and thighs.

Lower Body:  knees, calves and feet.

Next we’ll rate each of these sections on three scales:

Body Style: skeletal, muscular and rounded.  Visual Style:  small, average, and large.  Attention: show it, it’s OK, or hide it.

Okay, now let’s apply these parameters to each segment of our model pictured here.

Style Upgrade sees this:  “Her Upper Body here is looking to me like it is very nicely presented.  It is not skeletal, but perhaps muscular, as it is certainly not oversized.  On the visual scale, I would say it is average, and I would certainly draw attention to this part of the body, as the hair and shape looks very nicely put together.

Her Middle Body is certainly rounded, and looks like on the visual scale we will be calling this large, as it is certainly larger in proportion to the head and shoulders area.  I would hide this area of the body or minimize it.

Her Lower Middle Body is also rounded and larger, and would also be a “hide it” on my scale.

The model’s Lower Body has a great asset – she has “gorgeous gams”!! They are muscular, visually average, and definitely show-worthy.”

All in all, Style Upgrade thinks our model knows herself. Her hair is upswept and carefully maintained to draw attention up. Her neckline is open to show a nice chest area. The belt gives a bit of illusion of waist (see example without the belt), and her dress is the right length to flaunt those beautiful legs and feet.”

When I apply these principles to my own long pear shaped body, I have a combination of skeletal body style in my upper body, getting more rounded as we come to the base of the pear. I would have to say the Lower half is more of a rounded muscular style, leaving me wishing I had the legs of our model! 

My proportions are on an average to large visual scale, even though I am tall, my upper half is small in comparison to the bottom half. Definitely a ”hide it” to the lower levels! 

This guides me to focus my accentuations to the upper half and particularly the Upper Body.  Not sure about a belt – haven’t worn one in years, yet I have purchased a couple of jackets with belts that have looked flattering when matched with full legged pants.

Having been a nurse then stay at home mom, I have always been a frequent hand washer, which has led me to shed any extra jewelry over the years.  No longer rasing kids, or in a hospital clinical area, I can now start looking at adding a little “bling” to my ensembles! How fun!

Thanks for stopping by and “Making My Life Beautiful”!

XO Candy

What’s the 411 on Your Skin and What Did It Do For You Today?

I’ve just returned from a visit to my Dermatologist, and started to think about how different skin cancers form in each layer. What is each layer made up of and what does it do? We know there are three main layers – the Epidermis (top layer), the Dermis (middle with everything that keeps our face ”up”) and the Hypodermis (the base).  Although this may be a little scientific to understand, Apriori Beauty has taken the time to give us a description of what each layer of our skin is made up of and how our skin protects us! 

Human Skin is composed of 3 distinct layers, the Epidermis, Dermis, and Hypodermis, each of which plays a vital role in maintaining healthy skin structure and function!

Mammal skin diagram - 2001 by fatboygotsick

EPIDERMIS~ the outermost layer of skin, the epidermis provides a waterproof, protective barrier between our internal and external environments. The epidermis is made up of 5 sublayers: The Stratum Corneum, Stratum Lucidum, Stratum Granulosum, Stratum Spinosum and Stratum Basale.  The surface sublayer, the Stratum Corneum, consists of dead, keratin infused, flattened cells that are naturally replaced as new cells are created in the Stratum Basale and migrate upwards through the epidermis. These “keratinocyte cells” make up a large majority of the dermis, and help skin to retain moisture by both preventing evaporation and absorbing water from the environment.  The Epidermis also houses a variety of specialized cells including Melanocytes (producing the pigment, Melanin), Langerhans cells (process antigens, immune system support) and Merkel Cells (role in creating the sense of touch).

The Stratum Corneum is made up of flattened keratin filled cells, which are naturally shed every 2 – 3 weeks when we are younger. As we age this time period of shedding increases significantly.

DERMIS~ is located directly below the Epidermis, and is a dense layer composed of blood vessels, hair follicles, sweat glands, sebaceous glands, nerve endings and connective tissue. If you were to remove all of the cells in the dermal layer, you would be left with a network of fibers made from the structural proteins, Collagen and Elastin, which give skin its strength and elasticity. In young, healthy skin, Collagen and Elastin are abundant, but begin to degrade and are renewed less frequently as we age.  The matrix between cells where Collagen and Elastin exist, known as the Extracellular Matrix, also contains a jelly-like substance composed primarily of Hyaluronic Acid.  Hyaluronic Acid’s many functions include an important role in the inflammatory response, tissue repair, cell movement and cell communication.

HYPODERMIS ~ known as the subcutaneous or fatty layer,the Hypodermis cushions the skin and provides a connecting layer between the skin and underlaying bone and muscle tissue.  The Hypodermis contains a great majority of the body’s fat stores, varying in width depdending upon location (very thin in the face to several inches thick in the thighs and buttocks).  It also houses larger blood vessels and nerves, and plays an important role in thermoregulation (keeping your body temperature within normal range).

What Did You Skin Do For You Today?  

~ It’s the largest organ in our body!

~ Protects from the external environment ~ Protecting us from mechanical impact, heat and cold, irritants and toxins, UV Radiation, and bacteria and other microorganisms.

~ Prevents evaporation and water loss.

~ Temperature Regulation ~ The skin produces sweat, which evaporates to help cool the body.  Shivering and subcutaneous fatty tissue give the body thermal protection against cold temperatures.

~ Sensation ~ Our fifth sense, the sense of touch, comes form nerve endings and other specialized cells in the skin.  These cells also allow us to sense temperature, pressure, vibration , and pain.

~ Vitamin D Synthesis ~ Vitamin D is synthesized in the skin after exposure to UVB radiation.  Humans need approximately 10 -15 minutes of sun exposure daily to produce suffiecient amounts of Vitamin D.  This should be outside of peak sun hours to avoid overexposure.

~ Social Importance ~ Blushing, paling, and facial expressions all help us communicate.  Healthy looking skin is also an indication of internal health and is considered a valuable part of our appearance.

Because skin provides so many valuable functions, maintaining skin health is not only critical to looking great, but feeling great as well.  We can’t stop the clock, but by caring for our skin we can greatly reduce the effects (and signs!) of environmentally induced aging. This is the mission of Apriori Beauty – to produce technologically advanced, effective, and safe products that not only help you look good, but help your skin function in a healthier manner! Celloxylin Skin Care and Lifeoxylin Cellular Defense Elixir accomplish this through the patent-pending Nutrient Reservoir, which delivers a boost of nutrients to every cell in your body! Celloxylin’s advanced ingredients penetrate deep into the skin from the outside, while Lifeoxylin acts internally to help improve structure and function from the inside out.  With all that your skin does for you, why wouldn’t you give a little something back with Apriori Beauty!

Thanks for stopping by and “Making My Life Beautiful”!

XO Candy

I would love to be your Personal Apriori Beauty Consultant! Complete the Complementary Client Registration to purchase products, or become an Apriori Beauty Consultant with me today!

What do Our Features, Proportions and Viewpoints Have to do with Our Image?

“Although each of us may, in some ways, fit a classic body type, we are unique individuals.  We carry ourselves differently, we have different “best” features, and we all have things that we would prefer to keep hidden from the world.”

As many types and shapes of pears there are, I have embodied several throughout my life. Always the tall pear, my “base” has seen varying widths! My school age pear was long and healthy, my teens through thirties pear – long and lean. My mommy years pear was an expanding one, and now I’m trying to “bring it in” by being more active, portion control and cutting out some of the fluff left over from the happy meal years.

Style Upgrade says we need to know three things about our bodies:

     Our features ~ Our best features, and the features we would prefer to hide.

          Proportions ~ The lines and proportions of our bodies.

               Different Viewpoints ~ How others see us.

Beautiful Woman on Catwalk 01 Z_DSC4200 by TOM ELOWSSONTake a moment to  ”consider” the features of your body that you would like to hide and those that you are comfortable with. My better features have changed, and as gravity has taken hold, the bar has been lowered of what characteristics I am happy with. I’ve learned to appreciate ”the pear” and with Style Upgrade’s advice, am enjoying creating a balance to my proportions through clothing selection and ensemble coordination.

Instead of focusing on: Is it clean?  Do the colors match acceptably? Is it comfortable? Can it be worn at the events I normally attend? I am now setting my standards higher, and thinking more in terms of what type of image my appearance conveys, and am I putting forward my best self wherever I go. 

What do you see as the best, most shining part of yourself? Choose as many positive aspects as you can, then create an image by your clothing and makeup selections – maybe it’s time to have a new hairstyle, too!

Thanks for stopping by and “Making My Life Beautiful”!

XO Candy

Why Use Alternative or Complementary Medicine?

Have you had a cup of herbal tea lately?  Ever taken some eucalyptus for that cold? Browsed the herbal remedy section at your local health food store? Chances are you might already know what Complementary and Alternative Medicine is all about!Herbs From My Summer Garden by ArtJewel Designs

The National Institutes of Health (http://nccam.nih.gov/health/whatiscam/overview.htm)  defines CAM as “a group of diverse medical and health care systems, practices, and products that are not generally considered to be part of conventional medicine. While scientific evidence exists regarding some CAM therapies, for most there are key questions that are yet to be answered through well-designed scientific studies—questions such as whether these therapies are safe and whether they work for the purposes for which they are used.”

Complementary Medicine ~ nonconventional treaments that are added to mainstream medical treatments.

Alternative Medicine ~ therapies used instead of mainstream medical therapies.

Integrative Medicine ~ a combination of Alternative and Conventional treatments.

As more and more individuals are seeking other approaches to medical treatments, with increasing interest in all things natural; Alternative, Complementary and Integrative Medical Centers are becoming more popular. Health and wellness are hot topics among middle agers. We are always chatting and comparing notes of who is getting positive results, from what and from where. We are also very focused on nontoxic ingredients as we try to manage living out our latter years in a robust and extended fashion (ie. lookin’and feelin’ good for a long, long time!).

 As a “show me the science” nurse for years, I have become open to alternative remedies after doctors have  handed me prescriptions that worked for the majority of patients with my problem, but the ”one pill fits all” didn’t for me. This lead me to start looking for other solutions, start using more natural products and purchase supplements that maintain my health and wellness.

With nearly 40% 0f US adults reporting using Complementary and Alternative Medicine treatments, ( http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/alternative-medicine) we need to learn what they are, what they are believed to do and how they can be used to bring about overall health and wellness. Such CAM treatments as Homeopathic and Naturopathic Medicine, traditional Chinese Medicine, Ayurveda, meditation, prayer, yoga, art, music, dance, drumming, tapping, chiropractice manipulations, massage, acupuncture, Reiki, therapuetic touch, and magnetic therapy are some of the options people are seeking to find relief for pain, relax their bodies or treat a condition.

While we seek the answers to what ails us, and how to stay healthy throughout our lives, we should be cautious to only take advice and recommendations from reputable centers of practice, and from certified practitioners. A good mix of Conventional and Alternative Medicines seems to be gaining popularity.  While this post is not intended to be medical advice, I recommend you do your homework, and a little research before you drink that herbal tea or pop that supplement, that it does not interfere with your medicines or treatments that you are already taking. Speak to your doctors and work together to create a treatment plan that meets your health needs, and fits your lifestyle goals. Many Conventional Practitioners are knowledgeable of, and open to Complementary and Alternative forms of treatment.

When you take care of the “inside”, you will see a healthier “outside”! Along with the more natural approach to health, you must also care of your skin with healthy ingredients. Your skin care is something you do not need a doctor’s order for! You can begin with clean, natural and nontoxic skin care today! Apriori Beauty offers products that are so safe, we have signed the Compact for Safe Cosmetics at http://www.SafeCosmetics.org .  When I looked at the supplements that were recently presecribed by an Alternative Medicine Doctor to someone I know, many of the ingredients were also found in Apriori Beauty products! Just what the doctor ordered!!

Now you can have it all, when it comes to Beauty from the Inside Out to the Outside In!

Thanks for stopping by and “Making My Life Beautiful!”

XO Candy

PS The information presented above is not medical or nursing advice, and is not intended as such. Please do your own homework, find practitioners that are certified in their field of practice and work together with them to come up with a treatment plan that is safe and effective for you!

Fashion Trend or Fashion Fad?

Going green, buying natural and toxin free are the current trends around us, gaining popularity over a long period of time, while the Beanie Baby fad came and went before you knew what they were. You won’t have any problems getting your plastic water bottles recycled, but you might have to camp out overnight to get the latest electronic gadget upon release! Are you catching on to the difference between a trend and a fad? 

A trend is a change that takes place over a span of time that usually comes gradually, and stays around a while. A fad is something that comes about pretty quickly, creates a frenzy, then is left in the dust, cast aside, as quickly as it came. Who even wants a Beanie Baby now?Beanie Babies by purplesushi

Let’s apply these definitions to fashion. “Following fashion trends is what keeps us in synch with the times and not stuck in a time warp.  A 1980′s power suit today would look as out of place as a 1960′s hippie outfit would have looked in the 1980′s” says Style Upgrade. Notice the twenty to thirty year span over which these changes in fashion trends took place.

“Fads are what marks us as followers, unsure of ourselves and who we are….”, wearing those torn jeans, fringe leather jacket or pearls and argyle because everyone else is. You wouldn’t be caught dead in anything but!

Today’s Style Upgrade lesson is to take  that fashion fad, and tweak it so that it works for me – my body type, my coloring, my age. At the same time, I can incorporate my tweaked fad clothing into my ensembles, looking fashionable and trendy at the same time.

I’ll be looking for those Roman Gladiator sandals, without the ankle straps (don’t want to accentuate those cankles!), slacks with a bit of a leg flair and long waisted tops to stretch out that pear!  Might even add a some chunky jewelry and a hat! I’ll know if I have it pulled together by whether or not my family will be seen with me in public!

Here’s to my Fashion Trendy Sistah’s!

Thanks for stopping by and “Making My Life Beautiful”!

XO Candy