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Beuty
Talk
Sadia
Moyeen , Beutician, La Belle
Q.1
Hi Sadia
I am a boy of fifteen, and having lot of problems with my face. It is
filled with hundreds of blackheads. I mean deep blacks heads about 2mm
from inside and they don't come out with ponds face strips or peel offs.
I also have a lot of pimple marks. As I am a student I don't have time
to prepare natural mixes at home but I can have facial or something
like that. So please help me get rid of them. The black pores are increasing
in number. Is there a good way of getting rid of them?
Ans1.
Massage your face with a scrub on a weekly basis using a circular motion.
Be gentle or else you will end up with rough, sensitive red skin. Go
for a professional facial once a month and request them to take extra
care in removal of black-heads from all over the face.
Q.
2 Hi Sadia
I am a 15 years old girl. I have got really long and wavy hair. It used
to be curly when I was younger, and my hair was shorter. I never really
had short hair. As I never had a short hair cut though it became a trend,
I still prefer long hair. But, my hair looks too out of fashion with
its huge length and the same old you type of cut. My hair is wavy, quite
thick and fizzy, my conditioner reduces the fizziness though. I have
a round face. I'd like to keep my hair long, I don't want to make it
short but I want to have a trendy look, to be precise a new haircut.
What haircut do you suggest for me? How will it cost? Thank you.
Ans
2. Would you like to straighten your hair? Long straight hair
is quite the rage these days. It will be easy to control and will not
be frizzy at all.
If not, then you could cut your hair in steps. This will enhance the
natural wave in your hair and make it easy to manage.
Q.
3 Hi Sadia,
I'm 20 years old and I'm losing all my hair. I can’t part my hair except
through the middle because it looks like a horrible mess and the parting
is becoming bigger and bigger and one can see my scalp at the top of
my forehead. I read about the mixture of onion juice and other things
in your column and its difficult for me to do that regularly because
I don't live at home. I'm thinking of shaving my head and letting my
hair grow back properly (I'm not crazy, just desperate and I don't want
to be bald permanently before I'm 30) but someone told me that doesn't
help. What do you suggest? My hair used to be thick and more or less
straight but now its just a thin, dead-looking, wavy, frizzy mess but
I prefer even that to having no hair. Please tell me what I can do.
Thanks.
Neena
Ans3.
Dear Neena,
Change your hair style completely. Whatever the length of your hair,
shorten if by at least 2 inches. It will take the weight of your hair
off from the temple. If possible shorten the top as well.
Before going to bed back brush your hair and put a clip so as to close
your parting. Do side parting during the day for a few months. Oil your
hair every week and condition it after every time Shampoo.
Once a month put a mixture of 1 egg & 3 tbs of Olive oil on your
scalp for half an hour and shampoo off. (You don't need to live at home
to get an egg) This will strengthen your roots.
Q.
4 Hi
I am a 19-year-old with a height of 5 feet 1 inch. I weigh 45 kilos.
I am facing problem with the size of my breast. They are rather smaller
and they look really odd. I love to wear sarees but I cannot do that
because of this disproportionate figure. Most of all I always have inferiority
complex about this. Can you please help me about this problem by suggesting
me a remedy (other than cosmetic surgery)? Is there any medicine or
herbal ways of doing it? I also have tiny hairs in my chin. How can
I remove them?
Ans
4. Well, I'm afraid I have bad news and good news for you.
The bad news is that you're struck with the size of your breasts. (Since
cosmetic surgery is off limits in Bangladesh) and the good news is that
you can buy a range of fabulously designed bras, with natural padding
to enhance the size of your bust. The latest one in fact comes with
a jelly filling, which not only looks natural but feels good too. Then
there is the 'wonder bra' as well, which trust me does 'wonders'. These
are freely available in the Far Eastern countries such as in Bangkok,
Singapore, Hong Kong. All goods stores will have them.
Q.5
Nian
Dear Sadia
I am a 16-year-old girl and I am a bit concerned about my feet. My complexion
is fair but my feet are turning black and wrinkled. How can I get wrinkles
out of my foot? Can you give me any home remedy for this? Hoping to
get your reply very soon. Thanks.
Ans5.
Soak your feet in warm water for 10 mins then wash with soap water and
scrub your heels with a foot scrub. Massage olive oil on the feet while
it is still wet. Repeat as often as your feel the need.
Parlour
wise
Rebonding
at Naina's
People are going
gaga over straight hair, especially Bangladeshi women, young and old
alike. Although the trend of keeping long and straight hair has become
a big hit among the local women, remember that not all salons that claim
to straighten your hair permanently can do it correctly and carefully.
Everlasting damage to your hair is inevitable if your hair falls in
the wrong hands. Naina Khan of Naina's Exclusive Beauty Parlour has
recently completed a 3 month long course from CG Hair Design & Beauty
Academy, Colombo, Sri Lanka under the instruction of the eminent beautician
Cheryl Gunaratne. She also worked for Head Master, a salon that is run
by Cheryl Gunaratne for 3 months. Khan also received special training
on permanent hair straightening from Thailand.
Khan says that under
rebonding (a chemical treatment to permanently straighten curly and
wavy hair) hair remains straight and smooth for one to one and a half
years depending on proper maintenance. Unlike common hair straightening,
rebonding doesn't require regular blow drying of hair. Although rebonding
doesn't result in any sort of detrimental effect but it's always better
if one takes extra care of her hair through routine conditioning and
oil massage after a rebonding session. Naina Khan uses products that
have been brought directly from Singapore for permanently straightening
the hair of her clients. She has already served about nine women and
no complaint regarding unsatisfactory service has ever been put forward
by any of them.
Rebonding involves
a long time-consuming process. The hair has to be treated by numerous
chemicals and ironed cautiously because any misuse of chemicals might
result in heavy injury to hair. At Naina's Exclusive Beauty Parlour,
the owner herself not only supervises the whole straightening procedure
but also works with her own hands to make sure that the work is completed
perfectly.
Rebonding usually
takes about 4 to 4 ½ hours and the price depends on the length
of a client's hair. At Naina's, you can make your hair straight forever
within tk.3000 to tk.6000.
Straight hair is
definitely in. Never resort, however, to a beauty saloon that has questionable
quality to make your hair straight, because remember that any little
wrong step might result in enduring harm to your hair.
Address: Uttara
Tower (3rd Floor), 1 Jasimuddin Avenue, Sector # 3, Uttara, Dhaka.
By
Wara Karim
BY
THE WAY
Hang loose in comfy
outfits
Wearing
clothes that comforts your body rather than confine it can add grace
to your line and make you feel a lot more bright and confident. Skin-tight
tops or fitting kameez are hot for a date but can be very suffocating
after a while. This summer flatter yourself with any item that makes
you feel lax.
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UNDER
A DIFFERENT SKY
The
Quarter-life-crisis
Believe it or
not I am going through a mid-20s crisis, the mid mid-life crisis or
as they call it the quarter-life crisis. You haven't heard about this?
Well it does exist. I am a living walking proof of it. Yesterday I
blew a few candles and celebrated (mortified) being on this earth
for 26 years, just like that. It wasn't like the good old (young to
be correct) days when the birthdays meant merriment. I hardly ate
the cake. In this age I don't get pimples from eating chocolate, but
I sure do donate to the growing bicycle tire around my stomach. So
I tasted the cake, had a few celeries, and carried around a dry smile
making merry out of getting old.
I remember last
year as soon as I turned 25, my metabolism disappeared causing me
to gain weight to a point which almost made me look pregnant. I had
to deal with the annoying question "Ki kono khobor ache? (Wink,
wink)" asking if there is any news, basically investigating if
I am expecting, I don't know why Bengalis choose such an idiotic phrase
for such inquiries. Anyway, this year right when I turned 26, I found
not one, not two but four bright grey hair strands marking my paranoid
head. They are in each corner, North, East, South and West, giving
the NEWS to the world that this me is no longer a spring chicken.
Oh how I miss even being called the derogatory term "chick"
anything, really anything to make me feel younger.
The thing about
it is, here I thought only Bengalis look at women in their late 20s
as somehow crossing certain limits, but now it seems even here in
America, late 20s is no longer considered to be that young. Thanks
to the over-achieving 20-somes who just changed the whole definition
of being young and irresponsible.
To go back to
the whole quarter-life-crisis idea, here is what one research defined
the symptoms to be, regrets about the past, yearning for work that
is spiritually fulfilling not just lucrative, misgivings about relationships…
and many more which I do not consciously want to think about at the
moment.
Just to make it
worse, when I look around I see Bengalis and non-Bengalis in their
mid 20s showing all the symptoms of the quarter-life crisis. Many
are married and divorced, many have searched for the meaning of life
through religion, literature and sex and ended up as single atheist
parents, and many have earned their first million, bought a mansion
and hit manic-depression, not knowing what to do next.
To add to it,
I really can't talk to anyone about this issue. I tried talking to
my ever-so-Bengali mother asking if she ever hit the quarter-life-crisis,
in return she gave me a look of sheer annoyance and disgust. I guess
she just doesn't understand, after all what was she doing when she
was my age? Raising me and my brother, handling a career, being a
wife and pushing pots and pans to please the in-laws. Truly why and
how can she even appreciate the dilemmas and miseries of my complex
life?
Being the bitter
20-some that I am, I blame my parents for where I am now. They have
given me all the choices, the option of education and luxury, the
teachings of Tagore and
Kafka, the option
between living here or in Bangladesh, why have they opened my eyes
so widely that I can't seem to close them in peace, I fumed now wondering
why would they do such a thing, they are the root of my crisis.
When I woke up
this morning, however, being older and wiser, I no longer felt the
intensity of the quarter-life catastrophe. Really it was just another
day with a few more grey hair strands, just another day to be able
to complain, just another day to start over if I want to, or continue
in the same path, and just another day to have all the options that
my parents have provided me with, and really what could have been
a better gift for a grouchy, over-indulgent, sadist 26 year old Bengali-American
female.
By
Iffat Nawaz
*You can contact the writer by emailing nituta@hotmail.com
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