Clean eating and cancer

IMG_0079Three cheers to the BBC and Grace Victory for the programme ‘Clean Eating’s Dirty Secrets’ currently available on BBC II!. If you haven’t watched it yet, I urge you to do so. It’s about time someone young and influential started this conversations in public, exposing some of the horrible lies going on in the clean eating industry.

For those of you without access to iPlayer, let me sum up the programme. It’s looking at the booming and very fashionable clean eating movement, which promotes restrictive plant based diets which are meat-free, gluten-free and dairy-free. Gorgeous young folk, with millions of social media followers (and a lot of money in the bank), preaching their way of eating is the best way. BUT and here’s the big BUT, are they qualified to do so? Most of the theories being sold are scientifically inaccurate and based on flimsy extreme thinking. With the matching diets unsustainable and harmful to our health. Yet, the industry is unregulated, and these people are getting away with packaging and selling absolute nonsense . And no one is questioning them, because these diet sellers look gorgeous and have a ‘perfect life’, so they must know what they’re talking about right?! The show reveals that a third of the top UK health bloggers have sought medical advice for eating disorders – I bet that’s not on their Instagram page alongside a photo of a chia pot! Probably not, when there’s a stake of the £2,000,000,000,000* wellness industry going. (*source: global wellness institute)

You may think it’s odd I’m tackling this subject, bearing in mind I often use the hashtag #cleaneating myself. It’s because of that, I feel it important to clear up my position on this subject, specifically in relation to cancer. A lot of us have been sitting back waiting for this backlash to start for some time now; things are getting quite ridiculous out there in certain corners.

nutrition.jpgNutrition and the power of food on our well-being is something I feel extremely passionate about. It’s one of the biggest contributing factors in my recovery after treatment. Where the doctors were wonderful at removing the cancer from my body, it was the dietitians, nutritionists and pharmacists that I worked with afterwards that helped me get my good health back.

I’ve seen first hand what eating well as part of a rounded healthy lifestyle can do for people dealing with illness. It amazes me every day. I spend a good chunk of my time in the health world, building The Cancer Style Guide with qualified and credible professionals in this area. We’re having a great time exploring the constant advancement being made by experts.

Great work is being done in the area of food and health all over the world, but unfortunately, it’s not getting as much mainstream attention as the glorified, self proclaimed ‘experts’ who have built their empires on selling crazy extreme diets and lifestyles on social media – they are tarnishing a good industry with a very ugly brush.

In a world full of convenience food, high sugar products, additives, preservative and chemicals we can’t pronounce, I want to be a champion of the health movement for encouraging us to make changes and offering us alternatives. I want to be part of an industry inspiring everyone (not just recoverers) to make healthy changes to their lifestyle, so they can get decrease their chances of illness.

I’m becoming extremely knowledgeable in this area, but I’m no way qualified. I’ve thought about applying for one of those easily accessible (and passable) qualifications out there, but after watching the industry these past couple of years and the crazy-town it’s become, I’ve decided it’s better to align myself with credible qualified professionals instead (each with over 10 years experience in the health sector), and stick to the stuff I know. Together we can be promote living a healthy balanced life after cancer, without prescribing any sort of extreme diets or make big claims and promises.

When you’re dealing with something as scary illness, you’re vulnerable, often unarmed in knowledge and it’s easy to fall victim to the BS out there. Gawd knows I did, time and time again. This is one of the main reasons I’m doing what I’m doing – my team and I want to build a brand full of amazing people who balance out the nonsense with realistic advice and support to help you become you again in a life after cancer. Not create an off the peg, one size fits all, prescriptive lifestyle.

Some of my experience with diets during cancer….

Like many of you, I’ve been in one of the most desperate situations you can imagine being in in life. When you’re at that place, the inner fighter in you needs to do something. You feel you need to get involved, and have something to control. The doctors are doing their thing, but there’s got to be more right? You panic, and want to come at this from all angles – drugs, food, religion. All bets are off, everything goes. It’s that blind panic and fear that is sending people at their most vulnerable into the arms of the extreme diets.

I believed a handful of crap along the way. I read the books, I went to the workshops, and sat through countless global webinars from the comfort of my bed.

eggs-may-13-p28-660x484-Veganism had a brief appeal, but I never found enough convincing evidence to give up a food group I love. I’ve changed how I eat dairy (to be discussed another time) but eggs, milk in my tea, the odd cheese board and gelato are still part of my life. I’ve been judged a fair few times by other survivors for not being vegan.

-I spent my second round of chemo quietly worrying I was poisoning myself to death by not giving up sugar. All because I read lots of ‘expert’ advice which claimed that by continuing to eat sugar, I was feeding the cancer cells.

-Juicing seemed to be shrinking a lot of tumours on the other side of the world. So I bought a juicer. Then I was told by a nutropath in the UK that juicing is really bad for the pancreas and could harm me. So the juicer went back in the box. (For the record, I don’t listen to juicers or nutropath’s any more)

-I attended a workshop by a survivor who nearly (nearly) convinced me I could heal myself by following a raw food diet (raw was the clean fad five of years ago).

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-The worst though, was the alkaline diet. I’ll never forget living in absolute fear when I tried to learn this load of bollocks (it makes me cry just writing this). It got to the stage I was too scared to eat a tomato. A tomato! Something that is nothing but wonderfully nourishing and nutritious broke me. Some alkaline diet authors said I could eat tomatoes, others wrote I couldn’t, and one claimed that once you grill it, it went from being alkaline to acidic, thus becoming harmful. It was that moment, straight after a chemo session, feeling wretched, standing in the kitchen covered in post-its (of what I could and couldn’t eat), that I broke over a tomato. Hysterical to the point of passing out,trying to remember if I could or couldn’t eat it grilled or raw. If that little red tomato was going to be a factor in my death or not. How fucked up is that!?  I know that sounds extreme, but when you’re fighting for your life, this shit is extreme! Your thinking is extreme. Your fear is extreme.

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That tomato incident was my deal breaker. I never went near another fad diet after that, I threw it all away and ate a lot of grilled tomatoes. For the rest and majority of my treatment I ate well and healthy when I could. But here is some information that may shock you; alongside the wholesome healthy food, I also ate gluten, drank dairy and ate fish. I cooked my food (shock! horror!). My mum made a big chocolate cake after each chemo, which I ate without sharing. I smashed countless six packs of prawn cocktail crisps during the midnight steroid munchies. I drank gin martini’s and champagne at any opportunity I felt strong enough, and smoked the odd cigarette. I did all of that, the stress and pressure lifted, I used my energy to keep happy and positive, and got on with the life I had, whilst I still had it.

Steve Jobs on the other hand, who also had advanced NET pancreatic cancer, followed a vegan plant-based diet, totally different to mine, but didn’t make it. There’s no rhyme or reason to cancer, when it comes to who survives, who doesn’t. A harsh and heart breaking reality is, I know vegans who have survived cancer and vegan’s who haven’t. I’ve seen people smoke their way through cancer, I’ve seen people juice their way through cancer. I’ve seen people give up sugar and make it through, and those give it up, eat raw and sadly not.

cancerThe truth is we’re still understanding this huge and complex illness. There are over 200 types of cancer, which all act differently in the body. Different people, from different environments, with different exposures, and different genetics are battling with this disease. People of different ages, ethnicity, genders, body weight and health conditions. No cancer is the same. No treatment is the same. No fight is the same. No recovery is the same. So tell me how can one diet or lifestyle work for all this? It simply can’t.

No one has all the answers. Not the doctors. Not the nutritionists. Not me, or other survivors. And definitely not the health bloggers.

There isn’t an app, book, pill, magic berry or super-food that’s going to give you the promise of a cancer-free-life. And cutting out complete food groups, or following extreme diets isn’t going to do that either I’m afraid.

What we do know for sure though is that following a healthy balanced lifestyle is going to help all of us enormously in our every day life. It’s going to go a long way in keeping our bodies and mind healthy, and live a much better quality of life.

The Cancer Style Guide team belong to the school of thought that reducing the number of carcinogens, and artificial chemicals from your diet and general life, is one small way (amongst a number of other factors), of decreasing your chances of getting sick in the future (from all illness), but it isn’t a guarantee you’re never going to get sick.

It helps us feel better, more energetic, and stronger in the present. Our motto is “if you feel better, you fight better”.

That is our version of clean eating and clean living. It’s not about a prescriptive diet, cutting out anything completely from your life or demonising any particular food groups.

That’s the thing though, there isn’t one version or definition of ‘clean eating‘. In light of what’s going on, we might have to think about whether to continue using this terminology all together. Do we use it under our own definition, or step away from it to disassociate ourselves from the negative diets being sold under the umbrella term? We don’t know yet.

There are no promises. There isn’t a right way or a wrong way. We’re in this cancer mind-field together, trying to muddle through, make sense of it all and do the best for ourselves and each other.

Our in-house nutritional adviser (and qualified dietitian) Clare Gray encourages us “eat consciously”. Fill your meals with as much natural real food as possible. Reduce the amount of processed food, ready meals and takeaway’s. Do this in a way that suits your lifestyle, your palette, and the food available to your part of the world. Unless you have health issues to address, you don’t need to cut out complete food groups. By all means, have a bit of what you fancy, in moderation.

Food is one small part of life, keep it in context, don’t let it consume you or rob you from living a positive, happy and balanced life.

Enjoy food! Enjoy life!

Lulu x

Morning muscle

Hi everyone!

This morning was particularly hard work, after a rough day yesterday. You know the ones where you wake up feeling like you’ve been hit by a bus, when your brain wants to get up and get on with the day, but your body doesn’t play along – it’s in pain and it won’t move.

I hate these mornings, but thankfully not as much as I used to, because a) they’re happening less b) I now understand why it happens and that it’s just a temporary glitch. Plus, the  insight and understanding of my body means I know how to articulate what’s going on to the world around me, without frustration. And know when to push through the pain and when not too.

Some mornings do require a push, mainly because I have a job to go to and a life I’m enjoying again.  I’m careful not to book morning events or appointments at the weekend, as it’s too much pressure.

For the mornings where a little extra work is needed to get moving and out the door, here are five tips, with love from me to you.

Happy health x

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1. SHOWER POWER

The last thing you want when feeling achy and in pain. Yet, the power of a shower is amazing, both mentally and physically.

Cold showers: Stimulate our immune system, increase our alertness, frees the mind, and tightens the pores on our skin.

Hot showers: Relax our muscles, lowers body tension, helps with migraines, reduces anxiety, and opens pores.

Tips: Get the benefits of both. Have a hot shower, and finish with a colder burst of water.

 

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2. MUSIC MOTIVATION

Next time you have sofa surfing down time, and don’t know what to do with yourself – make a morning play list. Listen to it in the shower and when getting ready; it fills the room and your body with empowering energy. Choose uplifting, happy songs, which make you feel strong and motivated to get on with the day.

Note your favourite morning songs below or on Instagram, and let’s compile our very own Cancer Style Guide play list.

 

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3. WHO’S THAT GIRL?

This is a little game I’ve been playing since my teenage years, to get through anxiety and low confidence issues. I now use it on the days I need an extra helping hand to get moving.

I have a couple of different role models, strong women I admire, who rock the show with spunk and sass.  At times when my strength or confidence is flagging, for whatever reason, I call on one of these women to help me through. And I channel them, in psychological role play.

I often call upon 80’s Madonna when needing to get to social events and don’t feel I can muster the energy. What would Madonna do? Would she cancel and stay in bed. Hell no! She’d put a scarf in her hair, big ear-rings, red lipstick and shake things up. Even only for a couple of hours. So I put on some tunes, get out the lippy, don a little sparkle, and attack the situation with her cheeky fun.

 

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4. VISUALISE THE DAY AHEAD

As tempting as it is to succumb to the pain, or comfort of staying in bed. You know mentally you’ll feel worst for it afterwards. You’ll beat yourself up for not getting to work / appointment  / event.

Whilst lying in bed, try projecting your day ahead. Go into detail; what you’re wearing, eating, doing and feel the joy from being there.

For example, today, I thought about myself at my desk, dressed, and having banter with my favourite colleagues. I was enjoying a cup of hot tea in my favourite mug, and laughing at the general silliness we get up to. It felt good. I started feeling the joy of the day ahead. That joy gave me a split second burst of energy to put my feet on the ground and get into the shower. After that, everything was that little bit easier. The day didn’t disappoint, it was ten times more joyous than the projection exercise.

 

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MINTY FRESH AND REVIVED

And some days all you can do is brush your teeth, and that’s okay. Revive your mouth, wake-up your brain cells with a menthol boost, and feel that little bit more human.

This is more than just looking after your pearly whites. This adds a small healthy habit to your day, that will psychologically help you feel better, and more in control. Looking after yourself, even with something small (that most take for granted) is a form of self-love.

Tip: Have different tooth pastes for different needs. Milder flavours / strengths for the days your mouth is in pain / tingly, and stronger flavours for when you can handle some pow wow.

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Hi lovelies,

I hope you’re all keeping well and enjoying this great spring sunshine. Isn’t it wonderful to finally feel the sun’s rays on our skin.

I’ve been keeping well at this end. A little tired post my recent Berlin trip, but massively impressed the travel didn’t bring on any fatigue or IBS attacks. Yay! Note to self; I should probably write a post explaining how I planned my trip to help minimise the risk.

Despite being happy and healthy, I’ve been feeling a little emotional and wobbly today, which has set off anxiety attacks.

It’s that tightening of the chest, shortness of breath, blurry vision, and breaking out in a cold sweat that comes over you in a split second, bringing with it intense feelings of fear and an urgency to escape.

I was disabled by these attacks for most of the first year post treatment, and found myself hiding in toilets a lot!

These days, I’m in a happier place, and have them few and far between.  Yet when they do strike, I’m equipped with some handy yoga breathing techniques to get me back to centre quickly. I use them when I’m at my desk, on the bus, public restrooms, or on the sofa. They are a quick and effective solution to an attack, until I can look at, and deal with the bigger emotional trigger that set them off.

Here’s one of my favourite breathing exercises, which helps with headaches as well as anxiety.

Sit comfortably. Preferably sitting straight on a chair, with your left hand resting on your thigh.

Hold your right thumb over your right nostril and inhale deeply through your left nostril. At the height of your inhalation, close off your left nostril with your ring finger, then exhale through the right nostril.

Keeping the left nostril closed, inhale deeply through your right nostril. Close your right nostril again with your thumb, and release your left nostril. Exhale out of your left nostril.

You should now be in rhythm. Keeping going, slowly.

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Moving on, I will be hitting the gym daily over the next week to deal with this. Some days will be for exercise to get those endorphin’s pumping. They are the best anti-depressants in the world, and you physically look better on them too – what anti-depressant pharmaceutical drug can claim that?!  Alternating with yoga / meditation classes, to quieten the mind and squash the bigger emotional triggers driving the anxiety.

As for tonight, I’ll be spending it with one of my besties; with fresh air and laughter on the agenda. And may be a cheeky gin and tonic. Cheers! And happy health x

Train through chemobrain

Chemobrain’s a bitch isn’t it. Sometimes funny. Sometimes frustrating. And sometimes daunting.

Our brain is a muscle, and like all muscles, we can work it baby!  And like any muscle, if you don’t use it, you lose it. Here are some brain training exercises to help get you started.

Number One: Brain Training Apps

brain exercises number oneTop of the list is my favourite new find, an app shared by Liz Fellas (ta chick!), and it’s become a daily highlight.

Elevate. A free brain training app. You take a short test when you first sign up, from which it gauges your starting ability in writing, listening, speaking, reading and maths.  Then, every day you get three new games (from a selection of over 35) to play from these categories, and the app monitors your progress. The games are short and visual. You can feel the clogs in your brain turning! So much fun.

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Elevate App

Another brain training app I’m enjoying daily, which has the same set up as Elevate, is Lumosity bought to us by a team of scientist and gamers.

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Lumosity App

I recommend these apps to everyone, chemo brain on not.

You don’t need to pay for upgrades in either app, enjoy the benefits for free.

For brain training to do its stuff, and for us to feel the benefit in our day to day lives, we need to do at least 15 hours of exercises over the course of 8 weeks, or less.

My remaining nine tips (below) are brain stimulation exercises, to be used alongside the brain training.  Brain stimulation gives our brains new experiences via our physical senses (sight, smell, touch, taste, and sound) connected to our emotional ‘sense’, to help stimulates new connections between different areas of our brain.  Thus causing nerve cells to produce natural brain nutrients that help our memory, and making the surrounding cells stronger.

Play around with these tips during your recovery, building them up over time, do what you can based on your needs and capabilities. Chemo fog can take years to breakthrough, some affects are permanent – it depends on so many factors. The key to using these tips is not to overstimulate or push yourself, keep things simple, and most importantly use them to have fun!

Number Two: Use your other hand

Ambidextrous.jpgTry using your opposite hand for simple tasks, like brushing your teeth, washing up, using your phone, opening jars, buttering toast.

Studies show that when we use our non-dominant hand, both hemispheres in our brain are activated. Apparently this helps unlock our hidden creativity. Cool eh?!

 

Number Three: Mix it up!

f80a26f058de62267366864f189311a5I can quickly become a creature of habit, so I vigorously follow this tip, making sure routine doesn’t creep up and take over.

Studies show that new and unfamiliar tasks ‘exercise large areas of the cortex, indicating increased levels of brain activity in several distinct areas. This activity declines when the task becomes routine and automatic’.

So, mix things up! Open your brain up to new stimuli. Do this by changing your travel route; walk or drive a different way to regular destinations. I also play around with different bus and tube routes.

Mix up your morning routine. If you normally shower, dress and then eat breakfast, try eating your breakfast before getting dressed. And change your normal radio station or TV news channel a couple of times a week.

Number Four: Try and have at least one human interaction every day

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This can be hard I know, especially on the days when you want to hibernate and avoid the world. But lack of human interaction can have negative affects on our cognitive thinking, and adds to factors causing depression.

For the days when hanging out with friends and family is too taxing on time or emotional energy, pop out and get your groceries from a local store, where you can have small non-emotional interactions with shop owners.

If you have a bit more energy, go and enjoy reading or writing in local coffee shops. Over my recovery time spent in coffee shops, I met some kind and interesting folk sitting next to me, where conversation naturally opened up.  This is a great way of getting newness into your otherwise insular cancer bubble, especially if you’re not working, and your experiences are limited to friends, family and doctors.

Number Five: Play board games with friends and family

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You get two for the price of one here, as it also gives you social interaction (tip no.4)

My first summer, post treatment, was spent playing boards games; well actually, it was spent constantly losing at Monopoly.  I should probably ask for a rematch now my brain cells are working properly.

Number Six: Get nosey

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One of my favs! Not that I need an excuse to use candles and oils.

Without realising or giving it much thought, we have embedded smell associations throughout the routine of our day. By creating new smell associations, we alert new neural pathways in the brain.

Don’t just burn candles in the evening, try introducing new smells to the morning or afternoon.

You can also use aromatherapy oils here. Open up an aromatherapy oil bottle, and have a quick uplifting sniff before getting out of bed in the morning.

Please use natural oils and candles, which don’t use toxic synthetic scents and wax (see post Pursuit of a toxin free lifestyle)

Number Seven: Get crafty!

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Something I think most of you guys are doing already without realising you’re flexing your brain.

Think back to pre-cancer, when you were working full time and never seemed to have time for hobbies, what creative stuff did you want to do? You now have the time to try it! Go, explore and play. You’ll be back in the real world again before you know it, with only weekends worth of spare time.

Colouring in is trendy right now, with a lot of variety in picture books, this is a good thing to try if you’re still spending most of your time in bed / sofa. Better yet, actually create. Try drawing or painting, knitting or stitching. I’ve noticed a few of you learning nail art during your recovery – this counts too! Whatever grabs you,  just try it, who cares how good you are. No one else has to see what you produce, nor do you have to keep anything – I binned most of my stuff.

All of these activities help with your fine-motor skills, with the added benefit of helping create a relaxation state.

Being creative uses the non-verbal and emotional parts of our brains. When we create, we draw on parts of the brain interested in form, colour, and texture, as well as thought processes very different from the logical, linear thinking that occupies us most of the day.

Number Eight: Eat new foods

6c94874066cd108cd50ff9d2005c1aabYou know me, eating had to be in here somewhere. If we’re looking to stimulate the emotional part of our brains, then new foods does so brilliantly, it excites us through sight, smell and taste – that’s a lot of good stimulation.

You probably won’t want to go near new smells and tastes for a while. So take this one in stages.

Once you’re ready to try new foods, start small, go with food that doesn’t need cooking or too much flavour. Like a new type of tomato, that can be enjoyed visually, sliced at room temperature, and eaten with a sprinkling of salt and olive oil. Or how about a yummy new cheese?! And when you’re ready to try stronger flavours and don’t mind temperatures, ask visitors to bring you new food to try together. Get everyone involved, have fun!

Please don’t try spending too much time in the kitchen after treatment, you’ll be a health and safety hazard (the amount of fires I caused before giving up!). There’s too much stimulation in kitchens, meaning cooking really is one of the least enjoyable experiences.

As you get stronger, you can build this up. Starting from a friend bringing you new food and recipe, cooking and eating together. To you going to a local market on your own, picking up a new ingredient, asking the stall holders / farmers how to cook with it (they know how best to use their own produce), and cooking with it yourself. Not only is this whole jouney a wonderful layered brain stimulant exercise, it’s been my favourite game to play to a) get my eating mojo back (I hated eating for about two years) and b) excite myself into healthy eating.

Number Nine: Meditate!

Beautiful mature woman in yoga pose baddhakonasana.

I never let an opportunity pass to talk about meditation. I’ve been meditating for thirteen years and swear by it. It’s one of the biggest factors to helping me get through cancer. It’s never too late to start. The benefits are endless – I will be posting these over time. For relevance to this conversation, studies have shown meditation to help with memory and depression.

If you’re already meditating, carry on the good work, make it as daily as brushing your teeth.

If you’ve never meditated before don’t be scared, it’s not hard or time consuming. You don’t even have to leave the house. Try the Headspace app to get started.

 

Number Ten: Get snappy!

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A photo from one of my early recovery outings

Another of my favouite recovery games. This helps get oxygen to the brain, stimulate senses, get creative juices flowing and lastly uses fine-motor skills.

Go for a little walk with your phone – get moving and oxygen pumping to the brain.

Along the way, stop and take photos of the world around you. This exercise helps you view the world differently, makes you stop and look at the beauty in your every day environment. Look at what the clouds are doing. Are there flowers blooming? The leaves on the floor making shapes and patterns. How interesting is your neighbour’s gate, showing layers of colour, where the paint is stripping away and the rust is showing. There’s beauty everywhere, stop and see it. Be warned, this exercise is known to increase happiness levels.

And on the days, where you can’t venture further then the sofa. Take out your laptop, download the photos and hone your fine-motor skills by editing the photos. Scale them, zoom in, cut them up, shade ’em, add filters. Go nuts!

I love to see how you’re all getting on. Take photos of yourself putting these exercises into practice and share with me over on Instagram (thecancerstyleguide). 

When you’re ready to start moving, at least 10 minutes exercise a day helps travel oxygen to the brain.  A great little read about the benefits of exercise on the brain from my fav relation/meditation source, Headspace (it’s not a heavy a read, I promise) https://www.headspace.com/blog/2015/11/04/how-does-exercising-your-body-give-your-brain-a-workout/

Lastly, processed foods, sugar, caffeine, stodgy carbs, not only feed cancer related fatigue, it feeds chemobrain too.  Natural foods, fresh fruit, veg, oily fish and water all help. Something to bear in mind when you’re able to start making healthier eating choices.

Happy health,

Lulu x

Body moisturisers for post treatment skin

Hi guys,

Today I’m sharing with you favourite body moisturisers for when your skin is beyond dehydrated from treatment, and it becomes patchy, flakey, and looks like scales.  It’s depressingly unsexy.

I won’t preach about hydration from the inside; we hear it from the doctors all the time….snooze…..we know, we know, ‘drink water’.  Drinking water helps with most treatment side-affects but it’s not enough.  I say blast hydration from all angles, inside and outside.  And with the outside, layer it up, smother yourself with as much moisturiser as you can, head to toe, for as long as your skin needs to feel healthy again.

Thank you to The Cancer Style Guide Panel and Instagramers for helping compile this list, here are some of our favourite creams, oils and lotions:

Picture 61Weleda – Sea Buckthorn Body Oil / Cowshed – Grumpy Cow / Burt’s Bees – Fragrance Free Shea Butter and Vitamin E Body Lotion / bamford – Botanic Body Oil / bamford – Botanic Nature Balm / Korres – Santorini Vine Body Milk

Picture 59sukin – Hydrating Body Lotion/ Aesop – Geranium Leaf Body Balm / Aesop – Rind Aromatique Body Balm / Green People – Fragrance Free Hand and Body Lotion  (Vegan) / Fushi – Coconut Oil (Vegan) / Green People – Nurture Body Lotion (Vegan)

Picture 66E45 Intense Recovery (For Eczema) / Fushi – Avocado Oil / Ren – Moroccan Rose Otto Ultra Moisture Body Oil / Ren – Grapeseed Jojoba and Shea Butter Body Cream / Kiehl’s Creme de Corps / Salcura – Bioskin (For Eczema & Psoriasis) / Jason – Age Renewal Vitamin E

Please note, Neil’s Yard and Aromatherapy Associates are trusted natural brands offering wonderful moisturising oils and creams, however didn’t make the cut this time due to the smell potency of their products.  They’re great for later stage of recovery but not for the early stages, when you tend to be smell sensitive.

Moisturising tips:

  • No hot baths and showers, hot water dehydrates the skin even more.
  • Exfoliate when you have the strength and energy (see post below on dry brushing), to help sweep away the barrier of dry skin and allow the moisturiser to penetrate better.
  • Layer up the moisture, start with moisturising soaps and bath soaks.
  • Pat dry with a towel, and apply the moisturiser to your skin when damp (not completely dry), to help lock the water into the skin.
  • If you are smell sensitive or have rashes, opt for fragrance free products which won’t aggravate your nose or skin.
  • After application, give yourself several minutes before dressing.  Let the skin absorb as much of the moisturiser as possible, undisturbed. This is especially important if you’re using a body oil.

Lastly, if you’ve developed eczema or psoriasis during treatment or due to stress, E45 and Bioskin (shown above), are recommended by sufferers.  If your condition is bad or continues for a period of time, don’t suffer in silence, speak to your GP and ask for a referral to a dermatologist.  You may need a short course of medicated treatment before switching to shop bought products.

Happy health,

Lulu x

Pursuit of a toxin free lifestyle

For me, this lifestyle is all about self love.  Giving my body the absolute best I can for long term health and happiness”. 

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I was asked recently why I decided to pursue a toxin free lifestyle.  So, before I open my beauty bag and cleaning cupboard to you over a series of new posts, sharing recommended toxin-free products, I thought I’d give you an introduction as to the why, what and how.

As a cancer survivor, I’m sure this isn’t the first time you’re hearing about someone else’s decision to live toxin free.  I’m also sure you were bombarded with crazy articles and conspiracy theories from friends, which scared you using anything and everything in your home.  Everything from loo paper to toothpaste is going to kill you according to the internet.  If you look hard enough, you will find an article from someone ‘credible’ linking everything to cancer.  It’s even scarier reading this stuff when you’re in the middle of the cancer fight.

There is some truth behind some of these stories.  There are chemicals out there in the everyday products found in our homes, that are classified as carcinogenic which are linked to cancer, endocrine disruption, reproductive toxicity, immunotoxicity, neurotoxicity and allergies.

If you want to read more about carcinogenics: http://www.cancer.org/cancer/cancercauses/othercarcinogens/generalinformationaboutcarcinogens/known-and-probable-human-carcinogens

The good news is, if you want to start eliminating toxins from your life, you can.  It’s daunting, frustrating, and it takes a while, but we’re lucky enough to live in a day and age to have alternatives.

My journey……

avoOne of my favourite childhood memories was watching with intrigue and amazement as my dear dad washed his hair with weird and wonderful kitchen-found products.  There were lemons, olive oil, beer and eggs…not all together, obviously.  And the only way I was ever allowed to use face masks as a teenager was to learn recipes to make them myself….queue, an increase of avocados on mum’s shopping list, not an easy all-year-round find back in the early 90’s.

We grew up in a family that mixed natural methods alongside regular products found in the supermarket.  It’s the same story with household cleaning products, our grannies taught us the powerful benefits on lemons, vinegar and bicarb and we used them alongside Persil, Flash and Mr.Muscle.

That being said, over the years, the preference for convenience, big promises and pretty packaging won over the traditional non-chemical approach learned in my youth, and my adult cupboards became full of toxins and chemicals.

Fast-forward 20 odd years later.

Within days of being diagnosed with the Big C, I had a treatment plan.  I needed an aggressive cocktail of different chemo drugs to shrink the tumour by 15-20% for surgeons to operate.  We have to remember treatment is a choice, and having already seen Steve Jobs waste precious time with natural alternatives on his NET pancreatic tumour, I chose to proceed with pumping my body full of nasty toxic chemicals, knowing I had a small window of opportunity to attack the tumour.  I believe in modern medicine and science as much as I believe in natural remedies – there’s a time and a place for both.  I don’t believe they are mutual exclusive choices either; they can work just as successfully, if not better, hand in hand along the way, through treatment and recovery.

chemotherapy-drugsHaving chosen the chemotherapy road, I decided to make some lifestyle changes along side it and give it all I had. One of those changes was cleaning up my act and reducing the number of toxins I was putting in my body aside from drugs.  Limiting the carcinogenics going into my body, so it could work at its optimum strength to fight the cancer already there.  That was my approach, and not something that was medically backed by the doctors.  Considering how we were raised, turning to toxin-free products and home-made potions felt like the completely natural thing to do.

I remember my sister Georgie kicking things off, calling me in that first week to say she was coming over to pick me up – we were going ‘toxin-free shopping’ at Planet Organic. Whoop! I loved shopping back then.  Whilst waiting for her to come over, I got out a black bag and binned all the washing powders, liquids, sprays and detergents from under the sink.  That was fun and easy peasy.  Then I got to the bathroom cupboard; that bit wasn’t so.  I looked lovingly at all that pretty packaging I mentioned earlier, doing a mental tally of how much those trips to Space NK totaled, sat on the bathroom floor and wept.  How was I going to replace all these gorgeous lotions and potions?  I loved the idea of going clean but I’d spent a lifetime finding the right curling crème for my ringlets, the right moisturising shampoo for bleached damage hair, and the moisturisers and perfumes that made me smell of wild jasmine nights.  How? How was all this stuff going to be replaced?  It was bad enough having chemo, but now I was giving up all the magic products that made me look and feel like me.

I huffed and puffed (and perhaps stomped a little) for the 10-minute drive to Planet Organic. Poor Georgie. She ever so patiently tried to convince me the shelves were stacked with shiny new high performing clean products.  All I could do was remember the smelly, ugly bottled beauty products that lined the shelves in the 90’s health stores.

PO.jpgI silently walked around Planet O (I go quiet when I’m really mad), Georgie excitedly showing me the new health store of the naughtiest, whilst I dragged my feet thinking of my empty bathroom cupboard.  As we turned the corner into the beauty aisle, my heart skipped a beat. What was this?  This wasn’t the health store beauty aisle I remembered. This was a beauty aisle I recognised!  Brands and products I already knew and loved, not realising they were clean and green. This was high-end pretty packaging-ville.  Oh hurrah!  There were no compromises or second rate products here.

We forked out a fair bit to get the staples.  To ease the financial and emotional pressure, we decided to start with the basics and find alternatives for all the other products over time.  We started with; shampoo, conditioner, body soap, hand soap, face moisturiser, body moisturiser, deodorant and toothpaste.

With only the exception on bleach, all the other cleaning products were replaced in the house.  I kept the bleach at the back of the cupboard for emergencies, but that’s since gone too.

Replacing kitchen sprays is straightforward, we’re not as attached to them as we are our shampoo.  However, when it came to personal grooming products, I didn’t fall in love with everything I first tried – but hey, you gotta start somewhere.  There were times I got frustrated, and stressed at not finding ‘clean’ replacements that were high performing or to my taste.  With stress itself being a toxin, I decided to relax, and revert to my old products until I found a good clean alternative to take over.  Once I took the pressure off to do everything in one go, it became a nice adventure amidst the hospital appointments, and over time I’ve slowly found the products that best suit my needs and home.

I’ve seen such evolvement in this area, with regular brands cutting out naughty chemicals, as well as the cleaner alternatives becoming easily available and cost comparative.  You’ll be surprised how much easier it is to find cleaner and natural brands.

My cupboards are pretty much toxin free now and I love it, I wouldn’t go back to the beauty cupboard I cried over years ago.  However, I’ve stayed relaxed about the whole thing, and still happily turn to high performance products every now and then, when a bit of extra help is needed.  Especially in the early days of recovery, when let’s face it, we need a lot of help to get our outsides back to where we want them to be.

Examples of this; I may have a carcinogenic free toothpaste for long term use, but used a few months worth of whitening strips after being bed bound for the best part of a year, and needed to get my pearly whites back to smiling standard.  And don’t get me started on deodorants, there weren’t any natural ones out that could deal with the hormone flushes, so I stayed with Mitchum until they stopped and could comfortably switch to something more natural.

Going clean all in one go is a costly and exhausting exercise, treatment and recovery is hard enough.  My advice is to take it slow, enjoy the ride, and don’t put too much pressure on yourself.  Let the people around you know what you’re doing, so they can help with gifts and recommendations.  Talk to shop assistants and the girls at the beauty counters, they’ll give you great free advice and often samples.  Watch this space and Instagram for recommendations, and soon I’ll be launching an exciting project to help bring you the best products out there straight to your homes.

MEAlthough I’m now cancer free, and treatment is well and truly finished, I continue to pursue a toxin free lifestyle.  Why?  Well, I want to stay healthy and keep the cancer at bay for as long as possible, and my part in that starts with how I treat my body. For me, this lifestyle is all about self love.  Giving my body the absolute best I can for long-term health and happiness.  And on a separate note, but a really important one to raise. Toxins and chemicals feed (CRF) fatigue, a side-effect of cancer therapy, and something I’ve been struggling with.

My body is getting stronger, my gastric system healthier and fatigue better under control.  I attribute that to the lifestyle I’ve been building and a big part of that is living toxin free.  

Toxins to our bodies are not only constrained to products found in bottles, the wrong food and stress can of course be just as toxic.  You’ll find once you start going down this path, you’ll become keen to live cleaner in those areas too.  It’s a snowball affect, it feels so good and healthy, that it’s hard not to want to continue making changes everywhere.  It doesn’t have to be drastic, you don’t have to give up work, turn into a raw food eating vegan and live on a farm.  Again, there are ways to start reducing toxins in all areas of your life, as you continue living exactly where you are.

Living a clean lifestyle for me has been, and still is a slow burn.  Changing over 30 years worth of habits and tastes in one go would have been an impossible task.  But as you start adding the good stuff, the bad stuff starts falling away from your life quite naturally. 

There are loads of ‘detox your body’ / ‘detox your life’ programmes out there, apparently you can do it all in 30 days, 10 days etc.. etc.  Maybe some people can, but I’ve yet to see anyone in the real world do this and keep to it successfully.  As soon as you get back to your real life, or come up against real life challenges, it is scientifically proven that we revert back to old and familiar habits.  The idea is to be clever and create a new normal, one habit at a time, reprogramming your neurological patterns.  I refuse to believe you can change a whole lifetime of eating, shopping, living and working habits in one go or 30 days.  It takes time, work and dedication. But with a relaxed attitude and an appetite for the new, it’s a fun road to take and the benefits make it worthwhile.

I encourage you all, survivor or not, to make the decision to change.

Happy health,

Lulu x

The Cancer Style Guide in 2016!

Happy New Year warriors!

Picture 372015 was a topsy turvy year and other areas of my life and wellbeing needed my time and focus, so the blog was put on ice. It may have been  a year since the last post, but that’s not to say I haven’t been busy chipping away behind the scenes.

I spent last year listening and engaging with other warriors to better understand the problems and frustrations you’re facing out there, and using this information to develop some exciting lifestyle projects to help support recovery.

Right now the focus is to design a logo for The Cancer Style Guide, which is VERY exciting. Then all our plans will be revealed in due course.

Until then, the blog will resume business, with the information and advice you’re asking for. Thank you for your patience, for your support, comments and emails (keep ’em coming!).

Happy health,

Lulu x

Bathing Beauty: Salts by Dresdner Essenz and PEG Emulsifiers

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I like to think we all excite by the discovery of something new.  Sometimes little discoveries can be found right on our doorstep, as was the case with a little trip to my local pharmacy.

My latest find is a holistic German brand called Dresdner Essenz, and it’s affordable bath salt sachets.  Made up of a base of sea salt and magnesium sulphate (remember the epsom salts from my previous post?) with added plant extracts to offer us an extra health boost.  I bought a little selection for the winter months:

For soothing baths to help sleep and de-stress: 

  • Deep relaxation: Melissa & Valerian, including Lavender
  • Sooth and Unwind: Lavender & Hop, including Valerian

Invigorating baths to help boost your immune system

  • Immune Boost: Thyme & Honey, including Eucalyptus

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The pictures above show the new packaging used by this brand.  At the time of shopping, I purchased a mixture of what I thought were just the old and new packaging, liking them both.

Old packaging:

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However when I got home and looked at them more closely, I realised that the old packaging was also an older blend, and include PEG emulsifiers.  The new packaging signifies a new recipe with natural emusifiers, replacing the silicon PEG variety.

I keep a beady eye on ingredients in health, beauty and home products.  Where I can, I will choose to avoid as many artificial chemicals as possible – many are carcinogenic and on a day-to-day basis feed fatigue.

Not all my products are ‘clean’ (yet!), but I’m nearly there.  It takes a while to find good clean substitutes for some of the products you have used and loved your whole adult life.  There is great innovation and variety now-days, that it doesn’t feel like a compromise to go clean, you just need a little patience and sense of discovery.  So the older sachets are destined for the bin, if unable to be replaced by the pharmacy.

PEG Emulsifiers

Emulsifiers are used in mixtures to bind other ingredients, and they often have their own benefits to the recipe above being the glue.  PEG emulsifiers are a silicon variety found in make-up and beauty products, detergents and paper to name a few.

One of the easiest articles I’ve found to read on this is by The Ecologist: http://www.theecologist.org/green_green_living/behind_the_label/269662/read_the_label_emulsifiers.html

cross imageFrom their article, I have lifted a list of the naughty toxic emulsifiers to avoid:

Carbomer
L PEG-40 sorbitan peroleate
Carboxymethylcellulose
PEG-150 stearate
Ceresin (aka mineral wax, Ozokerite)
Diethanolamine (DEA)
Isopropyl stearate (laurate, palmitate, oleate etc)
Polysorbate 20
Polysorbate 60
Polysorbate 80
Potassium hydroxide
Propylene glycol
PEG compounds, eg:
PEG-8 myristate
PEG-30 glyceryl cocoate
PEG-80 glyceryl cocoate
PEG-15 soyamide/IPDI copolymer
Sorbitan stearate (laurate, palmitate, oleate etc)
Steareth-20
Triethanolamine (TEA)

photoxpress_tickAnd the natural non-toxic variety:

Beeswax
Candelilla
Carnauba
Cetearyl alcohol
Cetearyl wheat bran glycosides
Cetearyl wheat straw glycosides
Decyl glucoside
Jojoba
Lecithin
Quince seed
Rice bran wax
Sucrose cocoate
Vegetable glycerin
Xanthan gum

The new Dresdner Essenz sachets are PEG free, so keep an eye out for them for a winter treat or a lovely postable gift at Christmas.

Happy health,

Lulu x

Lets talk about spots, baby.

I woke up today with a whopper spot on my nose (I’ll spare you a photo on this occasion), which reminded me, I promised you a post on how to read facial spots, commonly known as ‘face mapping’.

Stuff going on inside us will eventually start showing on the outside. Learning to read these signs helps us identify which organs are distressed and need a bit of TLC at that moment in time.

Acne face mapping stems from Chinese medicine and developed by dermatologists over years.  This is to be used as a guideline only and may not apply to everyone in every instance.  If for example you get a spot by your ear lobe, it doesn’t necessarily mean there’s something wrong with your kidneys.  There are other factors that could be responsible, for example, skin care products, make-up, make-up brushes, hygiene, hormones, allergies, medications and genetics.

For me, most of the past few years were a case of connect the spots, and as long as my body needed help healing inside, there wasn’t any magic cream or procedure that could fix the outside. There are however cheat products to help you ‘fake it till you make it’, which I will share with you over time.

Now that my body is absorbing nutrients again, it’s showing in my face.  But as soon as I take my foot off the gas or start to feel run down, like this week, it’s right there in the mirror.

facemapThis is a face map and an outline of what it means when we experience an outbreak within each zone, especially if re-occurring.  I have gone on to give top-line advice on foods and tips to help.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Zones 1 and 3 : Bladder and Digestive System

Breakouts around the forehead could indicate that your digestive system is struggling to breakdown food being consumed.

Zone 2 : Liver

This could indicate food intolerance’s or a distressed liver.

Tips for zones 1, 2, 3 and 12.

intestines

  • Cut out / reduce your alcohol consumption as much as possible.
  • Please also cut out fizzy drinks, they are pure poison and offer no benefits.
  • Reduce too many dairy products. Switch to skimmed / semi-skimmed milk or have some fun trying dairy free alternatives: Oat milk / Almond milk / Rice milk / Coconut milk / Soya milk.
  • Reduce refined sugars as much as possible.
  • Drink plenty of water to flush out toxins.
  • Replace as much of your caffeine as possible with herbal teas.
  • Try and cut out junk food and fast food from your diet as much as you can: fatty foods, like burgers and chips, are harder to digest. By reducing these types of foods, we’re offering our digestive system an easier time as it won’t have to work as hard.
  • If, like me, the spots are part of a bigger digestive problem, speak to your consultant / doctor for recommended pro-biotics.  But please stay away from the pro-biotic drinks found in supermarkets offering big claims (which they don’t deliver) and way too much sugar.
  • Do a little bit of light exercise every day or every other day. Even if it’s a walk around the block, the fresh air is also another benefit.
  • Practice relaxation / meditation / breathing techniques to alleviate stress and worry.
  • Foods that help the digestive system: The two things that helped me the most and advised by medical professionals were natural yoghurt’s, which offer natural pro-biotics (avoid the ones loaded with sugar and flavouring, it’s better to add your own fruit and honey) and secondly fresh mint. Other foods for healthy guts are beans and pulses for much needed fibre, oily fish like salmon / mackerel and ginger,
  • Foods that help the liver: Let’s start with my personal favourite, beetroot, yum! And in no particular order, tomatoes, spinach, carrots, grapefruit and all other citrus, dark greens, turmeric, cruciferous veg (broccoli, cauliflower, sprouts, kale), garlic, walnuts, avocados, apples and green tea.

Zones 4 and 10: Kidneys

If you get spots around the ears, including the lobes down to the jaw line, make sure you are drinking enough water and reduce the amount of dehydrating beverages you’re consuming, such as coffee or fizzy drinks.
Tips for zone 4 and 10.
kidneys
  •  Lots and lots of water, unless you have kidney disease,  in which case you may not need as much, because damaged kidneys cannot get rid of extra fluid as well as they should. Your doctor will be advising you on your water intake in this situation.
  • Reduce your salt intake.
  • Foods that help the kidneys: Lemon juice (I try and have half a lemon in hot water every day as a matter of course), apples, pumpkin seeds, all the berries, ginger, watermelon, turmeric, dandelion, nettle, marshmallow root and lastly, one of the biggest helps to our kidneys is parsley.

 

Zones 5 and 9:  Respiratory System and Allergies

Tips for zones 5 and 9.

lungs

  • As mentioned before, avoid fast food, junk food and refined sugars.
  • Get some fresh air.  Our lungs are at their strongest between 7-9am, so this is the best time for that little walk.
  • If you’re smoking, think about quitting.  It may have been too big a feat to quit during the fighting stages. One thing at a time, and now’s a good a time as any. Recovery is as about moving forward and leaving behind our unhealthy habits.
  • If you’re prone to allergies, avoid shellfish, eggs, peanuts and red wine.
  • Reduce too many dairy products. Switch to skimmed / semi-skimmed milk or have some fun trying dairy free alternatives: Oat milk / Almond milk / Rice milk / Coconut milk / Soya milk.
  • Foods that helps the lungs: apples, garlic, flax seeds, chicken soup, green tea, cruciferous vegetables (broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, kale, sprouts) ginger and wheatgrass.

Zones 6 and 8: Again, the kidneys

Dark circles can be an indication of dehydration. Cut back on the caffeine and up your water intake.

Zone 7: Heart

Check your blood pressure, either at home, or free at the local pharmacy.  If that’s OK it could be something less serious like vitamin B levels or make-up / heavy creams. The pores on our nose tend to be bigger then elsewhere on our face and more prone to clogging.

HeartTips for zone 7:

  • Decrease your intake of spicy foods.
  • Cut down on meat.
  • Get some fresh air.
  • Foods to lower cholesterol: Replace “bad fats” with “good fats” such as Omegas 3 and 6 found in nuts, avocados, fish and flax seed.

 

 

 

Zone 12: Stomach

This may be an indication that you need to increase fibre levels in your diet. See above.

Zones 11 and 13: Hormones

Part of the joy of monthly menstrual cycles I’m afraid. You may be able to reduce hormonal breakouts with some of the tips below during the week leading up to your period.

PP-Flower-Plant-Organs-UterusTips for zones 11 and 13:

  • Try to regulate sleeping patterns, which I appreciate is near impossible for a long time after treatment.
  • Increase meditation therapy techniques, whether it’s yoga, meditating, listening to music, writing, painting.
  • Massage your body for relaxation, particularly the abdomen.
  • Foods that help with hormones: Omega-3 rich foods (salmon, mackerel, walnuts, flax seeds, sardines, soy beans), coconut oil and other coconut products, avocados, egg yolks, nuts and seeds, dark green veg, starchy veg (sweet potatoes, squash, beetroot, artichokes, butternut squash,turnips), turmeric, cumin, cayenne pepper, garlic and ginger.

Zone 14: Illness

Breakouts on the neck tend to be an indication that your body is fighting bacteria to avoid illness.

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Tips for zone 14:

  • There’s not much to do here. Spots along the neck down to the chest are common throughout treatment, illness and recovery.
  • Integrate this whole area in your nightly cleansing and moisturising routine.
  • Don’t try and dry this area out with witch hazel and other astringents, instead, moisturise it with face oils at night after cleansing.
  • Pay attention to daily hygiene.
  • Try and wear lower cut tops when at home to let the skin breath.
  • Oh and try the lurgie drink I talked about last week, this is great at tackling any bacteria connected to colds and flu.

 

Other causes and general tips:

If your outbreaks are severe and regular, keep a daily food diary to see if it’s related to certain food groups.  Take it along with you to your doctor and ask for a referral to a dermatologist.

Wash make-up brushes, sponges and applicators on a regular basis using tea-tree oil to kill bacteria. Make-up and creams expire, have a little clear out.

Clean phones and mobiles with alcohol wipes.

You’re probably spending a lot of time in bed, try and change your linen more often, especially the flat sheet and pillow cases .  This is a great job to offer those visitors who want to help, as it can be quite a big job on the bad days.

Not only could you be reacting to the lotions and potions you put onto the skin, but also consider your shampoo, conditioner and styling products.

Greasy hair touching the face could lead to spots, use jaw clips and hair ties during periods where washing hair is just too much.  If you’re getting spots along the forehead with a fringe, try pinning it back for a while and see if that helps.

Cleanse / wash your face every night, even if you’re not wearing make-up  or haven’t been outside.

Also, if you’ve taken the advice of the previous post and invested in a hat, this could lead to spots on the forehead with over-wear / bacteria build up. Don’t wear your beanies indoors and clean the inside of hard hats.

Happy health,

Lulu x

Fashion Fix: Winter Warming

a2d71973101b7f8f1f42ca067ddbdb99Wearing a hat is such great fun when it comes to getting dressed.  Most of us only have one or two winter coats in our wardrobe at any one time; adding playful accessories is a fab way of changing the statement of our outer layers.

Since we lose a lot of heat through our head, hats are also an important way of keeping snuggly and warm during winter.  By retaining this otherwise lost heat, our bodies work less to keep normal body temperature.

Another big plus is the benefit hats offer our hair, which is especially important when trying to grow healthier locks after treatment.  Hair likes a lot of moisture and the cold winter weather quickly dries it out.  By wearing a hat, we retain moisture to better protect it.

Tempting as it may be to wear hats throughout the day, especially beanies when indoors, the lack of oxygen will cause your hair to become greasy – not a good look.

Here are some hat tips and my edit of great buys from the high street.

At 5ft 10″ my personal favourite is the Cossack, which especially suits tall women.  It’s a strong look and not too be worn on the days your prefer to hide away from the world.  Team it with a simple tailored coat, knee or ankle length and heels for extra va va voom.  Softer colours work well on the days you don’t want to wear too much make-up.

Personally, I prefer to look for this style at vintage stalls and shops for unusual colours and different types of faux fur.  Try Camden Passage in Angel, Spitalfields Market / Brick Lane, Berwick Street and Notting hill.

For a mature sophisticated look, steer towards fur trimmed Cossack’s, which offer less drama but still flatter older skin with the fur next to the face.

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Brown faux-fur – Imposter at Liberty, £69 / Red and Black faux fur – ‘Karah’ Ted Baker, £49 /  Black faux-fur – Jigsaw, £39 / Fur-trimmed – ‘Kamy’ John Lewis, £70.

The Trilby is a classic style that suits all ages.  It’s understated, yet still giving a stylish finish to your look.  It’s a soft shape, which suits a more feminine style.

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Don’t be afraid to inject a flash of colour if working with black winter coat and boots. Pink Trilby – Esprit ‘Wilson’ in the sale at ASOS , now £17 / Grey Trilby – ‘Olympia’ at Jigsaw, £39 / Blue Trilby with embellishment – ‘Emila’ at Ted Baker, £55 / Black Trilby – ‘Bridge Hat’ at Jigsaw, £39.

If the Trilby doesn’t work for you, try a Fedora which offers a wider brim.  And if like me, you prefer a more masculine silhouette and sharp tailoring, this is the direction you should go.

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Green Fedora – Catarzi Exclusive To ASOS Classic, £35 / Red Wide Brim Fedora Hat at Topshop, £28 / Navy Fedora, with feather – Christy’s ‘Madison’, £60 / Catarzi Exclusive To ASOS Classic Fedora Hat, Anthralite, £30.

For those of you who are petite, try the more unusual look of the Cloche, a style from the 1920’s.  This especially compliments shorter hair-styles, and works with feminine coats as well as androgynous shapes.

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Merlot Cloche – Wool Asymmetric Hat, John Lewis £35 / Taupe Chloche – Soft Felt Pleat, John Lewis, £35.

The beanie gives a relaxed stylish look and has the added benefit of fitting into a handbag.  It’s one of the few styles that works with casual coats, as well as tailoring, giving you two very different styles from just one hat.  The loose fitting slouchy shape is generally more flattering, and try and stay away from logos and symbols.

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Grey chunky knit – Jigsaw, £49 / Grey and neon pink detail – Curl Trim at Whistles, £25 / Autumnal slouchy – Missoni, Orange Stripe, £82 / Green and neon yellow knit – Genie, Yellow Riley, £52.

Big bobbles are big news right now, adding more fun to the beanie look.  The added weight / height of the bobble tends to make this more flattering then tighter beanies.

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Navy knit with red pom-pom at Jigsaw, £35 / Pink mohair and black faux fur pom-pom at Whistles, £45.

And here’s some of the rest…..

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John Lewis animal print wool beret, £15.
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Lambswool and cashmere beret, Jigsaw, £45.

 

 

 

 

 

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Quintin Chadwick orange noughts and crosses wool beret, Liberty, £42.
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Big felt floppy hat, Top Shop, £28.
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Blocked felt cap, Whistles, £50.
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Jesse Bakerboy hat, Genie, £60.
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Wool bowl hat, Stella McCartney, £180.

Keep warm and happy health, Lulu xx