Acne Free in 3 Days – A Full Review

2010 July 27
by

There is a lot of hype about the book “Acne Free In 3 Days” all over the place and it all leaves one question to be answered: Does the book live up to the hype? For those of you after a simple answer, yes it does. For those after a more fussy retort, let’s take a look.

As mentioned in the book, there is a 98% success rate for people who use this treatment. And I know that to be right since it is based on the same principles I use and talk about, and I have a similar success rate with the people that I help myself. I have also been contacted frankly by readers, some of whom were so impressed with “Acne Free In 3 Days” that they were nearly shocked that I hadn’t included it on my site.

There are points in the book that I absolutely agree with, others that I disagreed with, and some that were shared or not as fussy as they should be, but the most basic attitude of the treatment applies to everyone, and that is why it works. The basic attitude is that the body must always be treated as a whole, and that all the parts of the body are related to each other in one way or another. And I know that this sounds obvious, but you would be bowled over how often this is not considered!

The actual process described in “Acne Free In 3 Days” involves a number of processes, which I cannot list without breaching intellectual property laws, but I can say that it includes a brief and drastic dietary change, required only for a matter of days, as well as some procedures you can go physically.

The only step I skipped, and I reckon some or most of you will as well, is the self-performed enema. But there are alternative methods of achieving the same result as an enema without the enveloping nature that the course of action entails. You can use 4-5 glasses a day of lemon water (fresh lemon squeezed into water) or cranberry juice, or you can buy pharmaceutical grade powders that mix with water, all of which only need to be consumed as a drink, and all of which achieve the same result as an enema, which is to clear the

The dietary change is intended to allow the body repair itself. It does this by removing the unprocessed foods and toxins that remain in the bowel and interfere with the normal digestive process, causing more waste and toxins to build up in the intestines. Without the untreated removal of these, the body finds other ways to repair itself and expels the toxins through other organs. In some people, it does this by making body stout, in others it causes acne, in others it does both, and on the rare reason it does a touch absolutely uncommon, causing any number of other diseases. The steps in this book, and primarily the 3-day diet change, are designed to fix this issue in your body as it currently exists. You will ordinarily need to do the process every few months but the steps are very simple and I’m sure you will all agree that it is worth it to get rid of your acne.

What the author doesn’t mention, doubtless since he is uninformed or the book was written before this became well loved, is that the reason this is so effectual is since of human body’s pH weigh. A healthy body will have a pH of just below 7 (neutral), indicative of the high percentage of water in it. The build up of waste and toxins (often from over-acidic foods) makes an acid-alkaline imbalance in the body and allows for an increase in bacteria and a susceptibility to infections. After a while and a few more processes, this will cause acne, which itself is a series of infections in the skin. The processes in this treatment method counteract and preclude this, despite these factors not being mentioned by the author.

In terms of the book itself, I was really bowled over by some of the mistakes that were made in the writing of it. This doesn’t really affect the consequences but it’s a touch that bugs me and nearly made me place the book away. I persisted and was pleased by the end but, for example, in some places well loved acne terms were mispelled – like Accutane, which was spelled in 2-3 uncommon ways right through the book but only sometimes accurately. This just looks unethical and it detracts from the right value of the content. It would take less than an hour to go over the text with an editor so it should have been done long ago.

Another thing that I noticed nearly instantly, and again nearly made me stop conception, was the way that acne was described. Before we even get to the steps the author, Chris Gibson, clarifies the principles of the book (as mentioned above) but also makes acne appear worse than it really is. I know that it is a hard condition to live with and often affects one’s lifestyle but I disagree that it must is “one of the most devastating” tribulations associated with advent. Acne only affects sufferers as much as they allow it to. I cover this in my previous article “The Psychology of Acne” but basically it is my belief that people will see you as you see physically and if you are confident, people will see that and be drawn to it. I be with you that the author has done this to ’scare’ people into action but I reckon that if people really want to get rid of their acne and they have paid to do it, then they will read to the end even without the scare-tactics.

In addendum, some of the data, though still effectual, are out of date and should be updated with new studies. Again, this doesn’t affect the consequences but it’s a touch that bugs me.

Overall I reckon that if you haven’t already then you MUST give this book a read and try the acne treatment it suggests. There is a money-back guarantee and unlike some companies they really refund your money promptly, so there is no risk caught up and if you don’t like the book or the treatment doesn’t work, you can easily get your money back. I know that sounds like a sales pitch but it has a high success rate anyway so chances are you won’t need the refund. Despite the issues in writing and some of the concepts, the actual product itself works and I reckon you will be bowled over at how promptly you see consequences.

George Cleanthous suffered from acne for over 10 years. He researched and investigated acne and acne treatments for over 2 years and he now writes a blog on acne causes, acne treatments, acne symptoms, acne medicine, and general in rank on how to deal with acne. For the most effectual investigate on acne, visit Acne Treatment.

Author: George Cleanthous
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
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