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13 beauty myths
Does tweezing your eyebrows really stop them from growing back? Discover the truth about 25 common beauty myths.
By Lesley Young
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Beauty myths are like gossip: irresistible. (My favourite: Preparation H alleviates puffy eyes – hey, Christina Ricci and Gabrielle Union reportedly swear by it!) But while most rumours are harmless, following bad beauty advice can sometimes lead to unhealthy habits. ELLE examines the most popular beauty lore and separates fact from fiction.
1. You should never wax before or during your period. TRUE. Hormonal changes just before and during ovulation may heighten the sensitivity of nerve endings, which means that waxing may be more painful, says Nicolette Oakwell-Morgan, a hair-removal expert at OMI Medical Inc. in Toronto. The best time for waxing is just after your period.
2. You should never rub your wrists together when you apply fragrance. TRUE. According to Marian Bendeth, a fragrance expert and the owner of Sixth Scents in Toronto, this can "bruise" the oils contained in the blend, chemically altering the scent. "Leave it alone and let the air [dry] it," she says.
3. Shaving makes your hair grow thicker. FALSE. However, it can appear that way, says Oakwell-Morgan. "When you shave, you're cutting hair off at its largest diameter, so you're left with the blunt end, which often feels coarser and thicker," she says.
4. Filing your nails in one direction – instead of back and forth – will prevent shredding. TRUE. According to Carla Kay, a celebrity manicurist and pedicurist in Los Angeles, you should file from each corner of the nail toward the middle to avoid breakage and splitting.
5. The aluminum in antiperspirants can cause breast cancer. FALSE. The Canadian Cancer Society states that there is no proven link between antiperspirants and breast cancer. While Internet scuttlebutt breathes new life into the fear that aluminum salts and other chemicals in antiperspirants mess with breast cells via your armpits' lymph nodes (think of them as conduits in the body), there's no need to sweat it – literally.
6. Plucking your eyebrows will stop them from growing back. TRUE. Sustained tweezing over many years (decades, really) may fatigue the hair follicle to the point where it may not grow back, says Oakwell-Morgan.
More beauty myths on the next page!
Related articles: Learn how to intensify your eye colour How to wear red lipstick Get gorgeous skin now!
image courtesy of ImaxTree.com
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