I happened to chance upon this ebook called
"Aloe - Your Miracle Doctor".
I found it really interesting and thought I'll share
what I learnt with you.
It's written by Yulia Berry and she's an independent
health researcher.
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Learn more about her book here. Here's what I found out.
Healthy skin is a concern for many people, especially
in a modern world full of chemically concocted pollutants
and irritants that encourage outbreaks as well as
damage skin.
A multi-billion dollar industry has sprung up to provide
people with a plethora of skin balms, lotions and even
prescription pills to help combat skin problems and the
population readily forks over their hard earned cash in
order to find at least some sort of relief for their skin
dilemmas.
While many large pharmaceutical companies choose
fight fire with fire by cooking up something the lab, others
have jumped onto to the "natural" bandwagon releasing
lines of hypoallergenic soaps, creams and lotions
derived from natural sources.
One of the hottest natural additives today that is now
being added into everything from hand sanitizer to
laundry soap is, ironically, something that has been
already been used for centuries. This substance is the
Aloe Vera plant.
Many Americans keep an Aloe Vera plant in their home to
aid in soothing burns and healing cuts, using the
succulent as a natural first aid salve.
The Aloe Vera plant has a long history of being a kitchen
ornamental that people prefer to keep around whether
they actually use it or not simply because their parents
and grandparents did also.
What many people do not know is that Aloe Vera's healing
properties have potential way beyond just being a
substitute for a band-aid and a mother's kiss (although it
is hard to top a "boo boo" kiss). Besides cuts, scrapes
and burns, this miracle plant can also help control acne,
psoriasis, frostbite and blisters as well as help maintain
healthy beautiful skin.
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Learn more about Aloe's healing properties hereAloe Vera has strong anti-bacterial, anti-fungal as well
as anti-viral properties. Being a succulent with watery
innards that could easily harbor bacteria if exposed the
Aloe Vera contains large amounts long chain sugars c
alled mucopolysaccharides (or MSP's for short) that help
fight off microbial invasion.
These Polysaccharides are essential in helping heal
damaged cells, and something that people stop
developing on their own after adolescence.
Besides these long chain sugars, Aloe Vera also contains
a large amount of phytosterols, which are plant lipids that
help improve skin elasticity eliminating the effects of
scarring and wrinkles.
The gel of Aloe Vera plant also has amazing moisturizing
properties and also possesses the ability to oxygenate
the skin tissue helping it heal faster. On top of all this,
this little miracle plant also contains 200 other active
biological agents including glycerol, vitamin E and zinc.
Imagine, you can get all this for a couple of bucks at a
plant and garden center.
While big name corporations are catching on to the
healing properties of aloe and are incorporating it into
everything from disposable shaving blades to mouthwash,
it is still in the pharmaceutical companies best interest to
keep the population in the dark about the many healing
secrets that this desert lily has.
If people found out that treating your face with Aloe gel
might actually do a better job in treating your acne than
a prescription drug that essentially burns your face does,
how the heck would they make any money?
Well you can actually start using Aloe right at home, and
here are some easy ways to use it. Regards,
Kevin Richardson
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