DIY Beauty Books



Bizarre Acne Treatment Book Finds Home in Estonia

    February 14, 2006

    Given the task to save the world in one hour, famed physicist Albert Einstein would spend a whopping 59 minutes to describe the problem and a mere one minute to actually save the world.

    Author and researcher Naweko San-Joyz took the famous physicists counsel to heart when she aimed to find a cure for adult acne.

    Instead of asking the question “Why do people get acne?” San-Joyz pondered, “Why does one acne medicine or treatment not cure all acne conditions?” The result of this probe- the talking acne code.

    There are thousands of acne success stories. A few acne patients discover their acne remedy in the form of a dietary alteration, an antibiotic, a topical cream, an oral contraceptive or an herbal supplement.

    Even so, what about the acne outliers that find no improvement from traditional acne treatments?

    San-Joyz found that answer lies in the uniqueness of a person’s genetic, immunological and emotional blueprint.

    While acne is not contagious, apparently acne can behave like the flu virus. For example, in the flu trigger phenomena, three out of five people sharing an elevator will not get a cold if a sixth person hosting a flu virus joins the five and sneezes.

    According to San-Joyz, just like a flu trigger, “People have acne because they are living with their acne triggers. If they remove these acne triggers, they can essentially remove the root cause of their acne.”

    San-Joyz defines acne triggers as any thought, location, feeling, food, emotion, response, drink, drug, memory and/or experience that sets off a series of hormonal reactions in the body that ultimately result in an acne formation.

    In short, muses San-Joyz, “People have acne because the are an ideal host for acne because all of their acne triggers are still getting activated.”

    Undoubtedly, San-Joyz’s findings are one of the most eccentric additions to the body of knowledge on acne treatments since author of The Paleo Diet, Dr. Loren Cordain, linked proliferating acne cases in the Westernized world to excess simple carbohydrate consumption.

    While the San-Joyz’s approach to treating acne remains unorthodox, the Ersen Publishing House in Tallinn, Estonia bought Estonian printing rights to her acne code book entitled Acne Messages: Crack the code of your zits and say goodbye to acne.

    For everyone else outside of Estonia seeking nonconformist acne help, San-Joyz has three tips:

      1. Take note of what situations or foods exasperate your acne condition and avoid them.

      2. Eat nutrient dense foods that contain antioxidants like green vegetables. Antioxidants help mitigate free radical damage that causes the inflammation in acne lesions.

      3. If you decide to use antibiotics, topical creams or supplements, use due diligence and follow the counsel of your medical practitioner.

    Most often acne patients fail to see noticeable results from medical acne treatments because one: they don’t give themselves enough time for the medication to take effect (usually 6-9 weeks in most cases) and two: they chose a treatment that is not compatible with their lifestyle (i.e. using topical creams with they are active and sweat a lot).

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