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Herbal, the six magic letters

Herbal remedies have been around forever but they've stepped gracefully out of grandma's old cupboard just recently



GOING GREEN Beauty care thrives on all that is `natural' and herbal

Everything, but everything has simply gone `herbal'. Herbal teas, medicines, cosmetics, spas, extracts, slimming pills, dietary supplements... the world is completely bonkers, sorry herbal. The general belief is that, if it is herbal, it has got-to-be safe; and unlike their `synthetic' lab-born counterparts, they don't have side effects. Of course, herbal remedies have been around forever and but they've stepped gracefully out of grandma's old cupboard just recently. And every enterprising manufacturer who affixes the six magic letters on his stable of products is rewarded with zooming sales for his little trouble!

Then again, it's simple logic really — given a choice, I would prefer an acne-cream chock-a-block with soothing sandalwood paste to any chemical ingredient. Oats porridge may be diminishing in popularity, but oatmeal makes up by featuring prominently in every hot-selling face scrub! And isn't it true that cocoa butter, honey and milk-cream are undoubtedly pampering alternatives to smooth dry skin over a waxy petroleum-by-product?

Ethyl and butyl something, this acid and that alkali ... even a common bar of soap has a list of ingredients that reads like a chemist store inventory! Moreover, `chemical' products have their own additional `risky' baggage and the attendant small print that sounds completely ominous — `rinse with plenty of water if the product gets into eyes'; `consult a doctor if irritation persists'. Whereas, if it were simply cucumber paste or tomato juice, one can happily leave it within the reach of children, and if terribly hungry, need not restrict it to `external use only'!

Glamorous

But what's this big deal about `herbal' really? Turmeric-stained complexions and egg-and-yoghurt-masked (smelly) tresses have since time-immemorial graced our land, while herbal concoctions have effectively fought catarrh and colic. Only, it wasn't exactly glamorous, until recently, to admit that you preferred to apply the contents of your kitchen cabinet on your face. `Imported' and `foreign' lotions and potions were always considered infinitely superior... wasn't every glitzy model and actress buying her toiletries in London anyway? Imagine the shock then, when one fine day the West embraced turmeric as the skin's best friend! Of course, ever since they endorsed it, it suddenly became terribly fashionable. And if one actually ate or used something that wasn't organic, hand-made and herbal, one was *gasp* a traitor to the cause!

Herbal hazard

While it's all very well to espouse a popular cause, there are a few cases when the `herbal' stunt is carried too far. Recently, a beauty parlour assistant told a very surprised me that they only used a completely safe `herbal' bleach. Puzzled, I sought an explanation as to what went into it. Pat came the reply — "We mix it with rosewater." And was I shocked! Rose water is refreshing yes, it may even mask the awful chemical bleachy-pong, but is it powerful enough to make hydrogen peroxide `herbal'?

`Herbal supplements' are, of course, a great grey-area (especially the `increase-your-stamina', `turn-the-body-clock-back-a-few-decades' variety). While most faithfully swallow the bitter pill, apparently spending billions at the altar of the promised `herbal cure', a few revile it as nothing but well-packaged witchcraft.

But perish the thought if you dreamt of wishing the `herbal' blitz away... for the herbal alternative is quite definitely here to stay. And if you choose to become a convert, there's plenty to gain from it — you may achieve that oh-so-desirable translucent, peachy complexion; then again, you may not; in which case, you might discover that you're actually blessed with `sensitive' or `delicate' skin, which deserves nothing but the most expensive, exotic `herbal' gels and creams. Lucky you!

Slowly, but surely, you'll start sounding like a top-notch botanist, who has moreover mastered several `herbally' sound languages. (Well, to figure out the list of ingredients, written largely using botanical names or some ancient language, you've got little choice really!) You can still comfortably use the same old brand you've grown up with, for they too have turned herbal (obviously!), what with all their treatment lines now containing strands of saffron, seaweed or strawberry extracts.

It's bottled convenience - squeeze the tube, and out comes sandalwood paste! No mess, no fuss, no grinding! You get to use products that do not mutilate nor mutate (the genome).

And finally, the products have been tested on humans (over several centuries) not on those poor rats, rabbits or monkeys. Doesn't this delight the animal lover in you?

APARNA KARTHIKEYAN

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