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The Quest For Looking Young | Best antiaging blog news and resources



The Quest For Looking Young

Love is a snowmobile racing across the tundra and then suddenly it flips over, pinning you underneath. At night, the ice weasels come.
Matt Groening

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Please have a look at our articles, products, resources, and additional information located throughout our blog. Today's topic is 'The Quest For Looking Young' and it may very well be a vital piece of information you need to know before you make a decision about any product, service or treatment you may be considering.

The Quest For Looking Young

Every human being is the author of his own health or disease.

The search for fountain of youth can be trace back from the early times to present day. The Fountain of Youth is a legendary spring that reputedly restores the youth of anyone who drinks of its waters. Florida is said to be its location, and stories of the fountain are some of the most persistent stories associated with the state.

History told us about the proof that ancient Egyptian women washed in sour milk and fruit based baths to improve skin. Beauty regimen such as old wine and honey improved the skin of French women in the court of Louis XIV.

In today’s world, women still use these treatments and many more to help in fighting those dreaded lines. Anti-Aging products boast of miracle effects over night, in all actuality, it takes time to develop those lines and it will take time to get rid of those lines. But fortunately, there is help for us.

The quest for looking young has turned anti-aging medicine into a multi-billion dollar industry in the world . All of a sudden longevity clinics popping up around the country and Internet advertisements for miracle cures bombarding your inbox.

Do you know that “miracle waters, magnets and light emitting devices are considered among the products that can halt the aging process?

Some believe that special waters have anti-aging properties. Ever heard of high-tech sounding “clustered waters” or “magnetized waters” and so-called “miracle” waters from exotic locations where people are said to live long, blessed lives promise everything from relief from pain to a long life in a state of perpetual youth?

We all know that it is very important to drink water. Researchers agree that water is indeed a fluid vital for life but t here is no evidence that water from places where people tend to live longer lives or that “magnetized” or otherwise manipulated water offer any added anti-aging benefits over your regular tap water.

And you think magnet is just a toy? Magnets in all shapes in sizes, placed in everything from mattress pads to toe rings to knee pads to face masks, promise a myriad of benefits including increasing lifespan. There are claims of magnet activating life-promoting enzymes and encourage cell division, which slows down the aging process.
 Sadly, there is no science that shows magnets offer any measurable benefits on lifespan. Let your children play with it or simply hold your pins and needles.

Flashlights claim to beam energy, protons, magical photons, into the body and provide some sort of life-force fuel that offers many health benefits including “reducing biological age” and “increasing lifespan.”

There is no evidence that such devices are anything more than battery operated flashlights.

So leave the water for drinking purposes, magnet for your children’s science project and flashlight in case of power interruption. Today, there are products, that will help you look young. Rejuvinol gives skin a plumper and more youthful appearance.

Check www.rejuvinol. com and see how it can help your quest for looking young.

Sharon Bell is an avid health and fitness enthusiast and published author. Many of her insightful articles can be found at the premier online news magazine

We strive to provide only quality information, so if there is a specific topic related to health anti-aging that you would like us to cover, please leave your comment, we would love to hear from you.
And again, thank you to those who comment daily to our anti-aging blog.

We hope you have enjoyed: The Quest For Looking Young

The bestantiagingblog.com Staff

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One Response to 'The Quest For Looking Young'

  1. Amzone - August 31st, 2007 at 9:38 pm

    Could moles be the key to looking young?

    Despite polite attempts to call them beauty spots, most moles
    are seen as unsightly blemishes.

    But anyone covered in them should apparently be counting their
    blessings - blotch by blotch.

    Scientists claim that those with lots of moles are years younger
    biologically than those with mark-free skin.

    They may retain their youthful looks for longer and could be at lower
    risk of a host of age-related diseases such as heart disease or osteoporosis.

    The findings might explain why supermodel Cindy Crawford, known for
    a mole above her lips, looks far younger than her 41 years.

    And they go some way to balancing out the link between moles and an
    increased risk of skin cancer.

    Lead researcher Dr Veronique Bataille, a consultant dermatologist, said:

    “Dermatologists have always said that nature doesn’t give us something
    for no reason. If the only reason for moles was to increase the risk of melanoma,
    it wouldn’t be very clever.”

    Her team, from King’s College London, made the link between moles and ageing
    after studying the DNA of more than 900 sets of female twins.

    In particular, they focused on telomeres, the bundles of DNA that cap the
    ends of chromosomes.

    Thought of as biological clocks, telomeres get shorter as our cells divide
    over time. Eventually, they become so short that the cells die.

    Previous studies have found that those with long telomeres tend to
    be biologically younger than those of the same age but with shorter telomeres.

    This study, published in the journal Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers
    & Prevention, found that those with more than 100 moles tended to have
    longer telomeres than those with fewer than 25. The difference in length
    equated to six or seven years of ageing.

    It is thought that having long telomeres allows the pigmented cells that
    form moles to divide for longer, increasing the number of marks on the body.

    Dr Bataille added that even though a person is ten times more likely to develop
    skin cancer if they have more than 100 moles, the overall risk of the disease is still very low.


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