Beauty Tips: 5 Beauty products you should never share
It can be convenient sometimes when you share beauty products with your friend especially when you are lacking some of them but are some of this products really safe to share?
It could be tempting when you
see your friend pull out that perfect shade of lipstick out of her
make-up bag or that powder brush you prefer to borrow (rather than get
yours).
What you don't know is that some of
these beauty products are totally unsafe to use. Even though the person
you are sharing these products with may not have a visible cold sore,
they may have other bacteria that could be passed off to you.
Here are 5 beauty products you should steer clear of sharing:
1. Pressed foundation
Dry powders don't
hold onto bacteria, but that doesn't mean you can't transfer bacteria
from one person to another, this is possible if you're using a sponge to
touch up areas around your mouth or eyes. The only safe way to let your
girlfriend use your pressed powder, should she need to touch up her
shiny forehead in a 'Selfie emergency', is to spray the powder with an
alcohol-based spray (like a cosmetic sanitizer mist) and then give her a
clean makeup brush to use and have her swipe it over pressed powder
once.
2. Make-up brushes
It
feels great to use your friend's powder brush because it bring your
make-up to perfection (Wrong!). While acne is an internal skin
condition, you can get break-outs by using someone else's brushes and
cross-contaminating bacteria. The only safe way to share your brushes,
is to use a fresh brush or spray your used brush with alcohol to kill
bacteria or shampoo them weekly (and then condition them so they last a
long time).
3. Mascara
Do
you use your mascara and sometimes feel like you are about to have a
boil on your lid? What most ladies are not aware of is that, your
favorite mascara can harbor bacteria and viruses that are easily
transmissible, like conjunctivitis. Since your eyes don't have the same
layers of protection that your skin does, it is more susceptible to
infections like pink eye (Commonly known as 'Apollo").
Also,
each time you pull the wand out and push it back in to lube up the
brush head, you push air into the dark bottle's base, feeding the
aerobic bacteria that can survive in an oxygenated area. The only safe
way to share your mascara, if you so desire, is to practice what pro
makeup artists do and never let the wand that comes with it be used; use
only disposable wands to apply it, and never double dip.
4. Razors
Most people know this already but for those
who are not aware, it is totally wrong to share razors. Razors are
important to not share, even though stainless steel doesn't carry
bacteria for very long, you can still transfer warts or genital
herpes,if you or your friend has either by someone using your razor or
by using someone else's.
Even
worse, razors can cut you and draw blood or fluids, which leave bacteria
on the blade after rinsing, making you more vulnerable to a staph
infection, hepatitis, or blood-borne viruses (like HIV, although it's
highly unlikely).
5. Lipstick or balm
Lipsticks
and balms are the commonest beauty product shared but they are a hard
no to sharing unless you stash an alcohol spray or wipe in your purse to
sanitize them. A large percentage of people carry HSV-1 (Herpes simplex
virus 1,which is ubiquitous and contagious). But because it is in your
system doesn't mean you ever show signs of it externally. This is
referred to as asymptomatic shedding, where you have the virus but you
don't show any symptoms, it is all based on your immunity and whether or
not something like stress can trigger an outbreak.
That is why it is so
important to use your own lip products, because if you pass your
favorite lipstick around from girl to girl and you or your friend has
the virus, you could be transferring bacteria or HSV-1 and never know
it. And then you won't know if you have the capability to develop a cold
sore of fever blister until you have it, which is unfortunately too
late.
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