Bikini Waxing – Should you Do It? All you Need to Know

Posted by admin on Thursday Aug 26, 2010 Under Womens Issues


To prepare for wearing a summer bikini, or for being able to wear more revealing lingerie many women have a bikini wax at a salon, spa.

Should you have one done? Well let’s have a look at the advantages and the procedure.

Why Have a Bikini Wax?

For a woman with lots of pubic hair, a bikini wax will ensure she isn’t embarrassed when showing a bikini line when wearing a thong, string bikini or a revealing swim suit.

Also, many women and men believe that less hair in the pubic area looks and feels more erotic, many believe that hair removal makes oral easier and sex more enjoyable.

This has led to a trend not just for more women to have a bikini wax but to go for total hair removal from the area via a Brazilian wax. More of that later lets look at the Bikini wax.

If you are considering having a bikini wax, keep in mind that the pubic hair removal process can be a bit painful and it’s a regular beauty treatment as hair will grow back in around 3 weeks

Preparing yourself

Before you have your treatment, take a shower and clean your pubic area.

Don’t worry bout the embarrassment factor a waxer has seen it all before and really is no more embarrassing than getting un dressed at the gym, in fact it is less embarrassing you’re with a women who does it as a full time job.

They don’t feel uncomfortable and neither should you.

The treatment

You will get into a separate room or am area partitioned by a curtain for privacy.

You will need to lie on a bed with your knees up or legs down.

The therapist – waxer will then go to work and trim down your pubic hair with scissors to a length of a quarter of an inch in preparation for the wax to be applied.

The waxer will start the waxing process.

The therapist will use a low temperature wax which causes less pain.

When the wax cools the therapist will remove the pubic hair.

This is where you will feel some pain or discomfort but it’s not normally as bad as most people think it will be and the first time is always the most painful.

After the first session it gets more comfortable and easier.

The waxer will ask you to get into some odd positions for easy access so she can remove the hair.

You may find your legs up in the air, to the side and even over your head as your waxer completes the process which should take no more than 30 minutes and probably less.

If the waxer is a good one the discomfort and painful part will be over quickly.

If you feel uncomfortable or nervous, just tell the therapist and she will pause generally it’s the anticipation more than the pain most women fear.

When the waxing is done a soothing lotion will be applied to the waxed area.

Your bikini area will stay hairless for around 3 weeks with no maintenance at all and then you will be due another session with your waxer.

The verdict

For 15 – 30 minutes of discomfort and its not as bad as most women think it will be most women are delighted with there new shaved look.

Its clean it’s sensual and it’s liberating and that’s something for all women to enjoy!

The bikini wax is also a good introduction to the next waxing full removal via the Brazilian wax which is discussed in our other articles.

Waxing is more popular than ever with women and has some great advantages for you to consider.

Tags : , , | add comments

Self Hypnosis Yesterday, Brainwave Entrainment Today

Posted by admin on Tuesday Aug 24, 2010 Under Self Hypnosis


Self hypnosis is actually the power to enter into the subconscious mind and try as best as we can to speak to the powerful subconscious mind. Hypnotism has been around for a long time, and it even has been used in ancient times to measure some sort of mind control. Many hypnotists have been on TV and what you see is really perhaps a glamorised version of the real thing. There are no beautiful assistants and there are no advertisement breaks, what you need to understand is that you should think about more advanced techniques like brainwave entrainment. Now I am sure that you have heard about it and now, we will tell you how to effectively use brainwave entrainment.

For one thing, you need a really quiet space, and if you can find one in your house, then that is really great, but if you cant then, you need to be able to find one. The good thing about this is that you can actually induce silence through the use of music plugged into your ears, and make sure that it is really relaxing and soothing music. Either method is fine, as along as you are able to concentrate and reflect inwards to be able to start the self hypnotism process. So this is the first factor that you need to think about and gain.

The next thing you need to do is to actually be able to make sure that you can learn about your own breathing techniques. You need to keep them under control and gain some sort of rhythm when you are doing this. Breathing is one of the most important things when you are talking about the ability to actually control your breathing and relax your mind. This is one of the most important factors when you are talking about self hypnosis, because when you are able to control your breathing, you would be able to induce your own peace and time of zen.

The other thing you might want to do is to actually tap into the power of the brain. If you did not know, the brain has its own mechanism to actually induce its own super states and hypnotism, and these are down to the brainwaves that are being produced by the neurons in the brain as well. So when it comes to this, all you need to do is to reverse engineer this situation with the use of some available technology and there are plenty of these that can be found online for your own usage. This is where brainwave entrainment comes into the picture.

So this is the good news about how you can induce your own mental improvement episode – all from the power of brainwave entrainment technology, and as you can see, it is not as difficult as you think it is. All you need to be able to do is to get the right sort of environment, the right sort of mental control and sometimes, the right kind of technology.

Tags : , , | add comments

Overcoming learning disabilities

Posted by admin on Monday Aug 23, 2010 Under Disability


There is a great deal of evidence from animal experimentation that for instance, rodents who are exposed to generally stimulating environments such as mazes, etc. experience better brain growth than those who are not exposed to such environments. These findings have been mirrored in human societies with children who have been exposed to impoverished, understimulating environments having smaller, more underdeveloped brains than children who have experienced more stimulating environments, who in turn have larger, better developed brains with more connections between neurons.

Now by default, brain injured children, such as those suffering from say, cerebral palsy, have smaller, less well developed brains with less connections than their uninjured peers. This is because their brain injuries prevent them from interacting with and taking advantage of their developmental environment. However, if we could somehow ensure that they did receive enriched environmental stimulation, then we know from the previously mentioned studies that there would be an excellent chance that their brains would respond to that environment by changing its structure and functioning, ie, by brain cells forming new connections. We know that this process or brain plasticity, known as ‘Long Term Potentiation’ takes place in all of us, so why should children who have suffered brain injury be any different? The answer is that of course they aren’t!

In the area of learning disabilities, we often need to concentrate upon developing working memory. Working memory is vital to learning and in young children, has been demonstrated to predict future academic success. When working memory is poor, it makes it difficult for children to recall the instructions given by parents or teacher, therefore making tasks difficult if not nearly impossible for them to complete. The effect of this is failure both at school and in daily life, causing lack of motivation, which further compounds an already dire situation. Children with cerebral palsy, autism, ADHD, dyslexia, dyspraxia and many more, all demonstrate poor working memory function

Fortunately, we can now address many learning difficulties by giving children appropriate training in the use of working memory and consequently encourage brain plasticity and rewiring. Many researchers have proven this to be true, most notably the Max Plank Institute for Biological Cybernetics in Tubingen who have succeeded in demonstrating for the first time that the activities of large parts of the brain can be altered in the long term. The scientists were able to trace how large populations of brain cells in the human forebrain are able to reorganise and change their connections to other brain cells as a consequence of environmental stimulation. (Current Biology, March 10th, 2009)

What we do at Snowdrop, when we see a child with brain injuries, is to design a set of sensory, physical and intellectual tasks designed to gradually strengthen the child’s abilities. The tasks are necessarily repetitive and demand the child’s attention. This is done for several hours per week, but we do see some huge improvements. All we are doing is providing an enriched environment designed to retrain the brain of the child with brain injuries, – an environment which will encourage the plasticity and the neural rewiring that we know occurs not only in lower mammals, but in human beings too.

Research has shown that Snowdrop’s approach is correct. If we train our brains we stimulate them to grow and change. By training the functions we seek to strengthen in brain injured children, they should eventually become more and more capable in those areas.

Anyone interested in more information on Snowdrop’s programmes should email info@snowdrop.cc

 

 

Tags : , , | add comments