Categories: Beauty

Little-Known Skin Care Qualities of Baking Soda

I’ve had sensitive skin since I was a kid. During allergy season I’d come in from playing outside and take a shower before doing anything else. Now that I’m older and a mom, I don’t have time to take showers or indulge in long beauty routines, so I opt for shortcuts whenever I can. Especially with such sensitive skin, I’m often on the lookout for convenient ways to keep my skin healthy. Convenience is key for me. I’m a mom and a full-time scientist so, while I love looking my best, most days I don’t have time for it.
Baking soda has a really high pH. I know this because I read up on it when I got curious about the chemistry behind why cakes rise without yeast. And who doesn’t remember vinegar and baking soda mixtures from childhood adventures? One thing I never knew before just recently, however, is how baking soda can be used as a regular skin cleaning agent. I’ve heard people recommend daily use but with my sensitive skin, I find a baking soda facial scrub once a week in the shower works best for me.
Soap is just fat chains that are exposed to lye, which, since it’s sodium hydroxide, has a very basic pH. Baking soda is also basic, but not as strong as lye. When baking soda or other basic ingredients mix with natural skin oils, a weak, gentle soap is made. Dead cells on skin are largely made up of oil in the form of sebum, and fatty chains that make up cell membranes, like bi-lipid layers. The point is, when we put something with a basic pH on skin, it converts a lot of the natural residues to weak, gentle, sensitive-skin-safe soap. Our own skin oil becomes a skin cleaner. How cool is that?
I know that some people say baking soda can be used in facial scrubs every day, but my sensitive skin couldn’t take that. I tried it for a while and found that my skin was getting too raw after just a couple of days. What works best for me is mixing the smallest possible amount of water with a little baking soda in the palm of my hand while I’m in the shower. The natural fine grit of baking soda acts as an exfoliating agent and I can feel my skin tingling. Using it in the shower gives the added benefit of allowing it to deep clean open pores and I can rinse it quickly away, which is important for me because if I leave it on my face too long, it stings.
That’s the other great thing about using it in the shower — complete rinsing. When I tried this standing at the bathroom sink, I didn’t rinse it completely away because baking soda that hasn’t had a chance to react doesn’t feel like soap. It’s hard to tell it’s there at all. But for me, even a small amount that’s left on my skin will cause irritating dryness all day. That, and when it’s wet it’s hard to see but when it’s dry it’s apparent as a fine, white powder. Who knew something as ubiquitous and cheap as baking soda could be such an effective, refreshing skin care ingredient?

Karla News

Recent Posts

Language Arts Unit: The Giver by Lowis Lowry

Helping students make connections between literature and life is sometimes difficult. This unit is designed…

5 mins ago

Irish Culture: Humor, Education, Traditions, Religion and Food

Irish Humor Pluralism is a belief that the world is composed of many things that…

11 mins ago

Best Summer Workouts for Fitness Amateurs

When I was trying to get back into shape, I found the summer to be…

16 mins ago

Homemade Remedies to Remove Excessive Earwax

Have you ever yawned and one or both of your ears clogged up? Or, have…

22 mins ago

Heritage and Symbolism in Alice Walker’s Everyday Use

"Everyday Use" by Alice Walker creates a conflict between characters. When Dee (Wangero) comes home…

28 mins ago

The Great Gatsby – Essay on the Corruption of the American Dream

Possibly one of F. Scott Fitzgerald's most astonishing work, The Great Gatsby is not just…

33 mins ago

This website uses cookies.