Finally caved

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So I consider myself rather efficient in keeping healthy. I try to eat right, exercise (maybe too much). Sometimes I have issues sleeping, but it always seems to be "enough" when I get it. Over the years I've adopted too many feminine beauty regimens to register myself on the male side of the gender spectrum.

However, over the past few weeks I've had some issues with my hands. Right now I have a job where I'm constantly washing my hands, and it has left some of my knuckles dry and cracked. The backs of my hands were mildly red. Sometimes they felt bad enough to where I didn't even feel like typing on a keyboard (writing). I was doing everything possible to take care of them; lotions, using less stringent soaps, etc. This just left me in a constant struggle of merely keeping on top of it, but never ahead of it.

Then my girlfriend got me to do something that I had balked at ever since we met each other. A few times a week she puts cocoa butter lotion (Vaseline) on her hands/feet, then covers them with cotton gloves/socks, right before bed. She's been doing it since I knew her in high school. I always thought it was kind of silly, even being the girly type of person I am. The way she explained the "science" behind it always seemed like overkill to me, as she put on lotion several times a day anyway. And I thought wearing gloves to bed was kind of weird.

Despite my thinking on the subject, I finally gave in. Last Friday night I tried her supposed magical cure. I used the same lotion, borrowed a pair of her gloves (yes I have small hands), and went to bed. The next morning, most of the redness was gone from my hands, and only one knuckle looked cracked. After the I-told-you-so's from her, and the regular morning routine, I actually felt good enough to sit down and write some. In fact, my hands felt so good that I tried the routine the whole weekend.

To my surprise, come Monday morning, my hands felt like silk. I didn't even want to go to work this past week, for fear that my hands would revert to the way they were before. Indeed, they did get dry again by Monday night. So I tried the regimen again, and Tuesday morning my hands were back to silky smooth. I decided to keep it up, and alternated days, even with my girlfriend suggesting to me that it was okay to do it every night. Truthfully, I felt a little strange doing it more than her as it was, so I refrained from doing it every night.

In the end, as of Friday night, I'm now hooked on this new regimen. I even started doing the same thing to my feet Friday, and they (like my hands) feel amazing now. Now I actually have a(nother) bedtime activity to share with my girlfriend. It totally worked for me, and I thought I'd share it here. Maybe it'll help someone else, or maybe I'm way behind the curve on it. Either way, color me one surprised silly gurl.

Comments

So does that mean

Angharad's picture

More of Bailey? I hope so. If you want to make it more effective soak your hands and feet first as emollients, unless containing urea, only prevent water loss by skin, they don't actually hydrate it no matter what it says on the tin!

Angharad

Good tip!

Soaking definitely helps. I did forget to mention this was after a shower/bath. I always did/do the whole lotion routine, but this was the first time trying the gloves.

And more Bailey is coming. As well as more Tight Knit.

~Taylor Ryan
My muse suffers from insomnia, and it keeps me up at night.

powdered gloves.

I use basic industrial work gloves on a assembly line. My hands get sore and cracked as well. What I do is use powdered rubber gloves that are provided at work. I wear them under my work gloves. I remove them and clean my hands at lunch and break times. At the end of the day, my hands look brand new. I can't explain the science. Especially not at 4 in the morning. All I know is that it works.

Jessica Marie

Not really sure

I know my hands produce quite a bit of moisture when I wear latex gloves. Maybe the powdered ones trap moisture better and hold it closer to the skin?

~Taylor Ryan
My muse suffers from insomnia, and it keeps me up at night.

Powdered latex gloves

Angharad's picture

add to the risk of developing a latex sensitivity which is why clinicians like me no longer use them.

Angharad

rubber vs latex

Rubber and latex aren't the same thing though. Though I didn't know clinicians no longer use the latter in a powdered form, they are still very much in use by salons... I know because I went to a beauty school for a while, though I ran out of money before graduating.

AFAIK latex is NEVER used in an industrial setting. They wouldn't hold up at all. Rubber isn't very good when you need a sanitized environment, but in an industrial one, they'll hold up a whole lot better.

Abigail Drew.

Nitrile gloves

In recent years, there has been a move away from powdered latex gloves to non powdered nitrile gloves due to allergic reactions to the former which may build up with time and exposure.

The UK's Health and Safety Executive (HSE) has published this advice
Latex allergies in health and social care

nitrile

Is yet another different substance, has the same useful properties as latex, same problems as far as not being useful for industrial applications, but doesn't have an allergic response (yet). I've seen it in salon supply stores and catalogs, though I haven't used it personally. So they ARE beginning to become available in the salon business as well, if not taken over like in the medical one. I don't have a latex allergy myself, and whenever I worked on a person with one during my practical hours I was advised to just not use gloves and wash my hands swiftly after finishing with chemical applications. They didn't keep a stock of nitrile gloves at the school I was going to, unfortunately.

Abigail Drew.

Wearing powdered gloves beneath rubber gloves.

I used to use the same technique when I was a dishwasher. The powdered latex gloved stuck close enough to the hands that rarely did traces of water get in and it kept any sweat or dampness from your own hands to a minimum over a period of hours. I would have to change the gloves roughly every hour to two hours, but that was more caused by a change in activities rather than by necessity. Wearing the rubber gloves overtop of the powdered latex gloves also seemed to prevent the rubber gloves from wearing out quickly as there was less friction between the rubber and the latex compared with my hands to wear thin the material. I was lucky where I worked that they usually kept both types of gloves at hand; however, at times where one or the other were not available, I could definitely tell that my hands were much more sore by the end of my shifts.

Katherine


Hugs from British Columbia! :D

Lubriderm works for me during Winter

I get the bad skin cracks and other issues due to dry air and stuff. I put it on after showering and it helps to prevent such things. I don't do the glove thing, the Lubriderm does the sealing for me. YMMV of course as everybody's skin genetics vary. For me it is due to the normal aging process where skin produces less natural lubrication as one ages. I never had to do this before my mid 40s and I still only need to do it during Winder now that I am 53.

Still, the gloves help prevent the moisturizer from rubbing off, allowing the skin to stay protected while it heals itself.

Cold weather

I do have a bit of a problem with cold weather too, as I'm sure lots of people do. I'm sure it'll get worse with age too. I know we're not guaranteed a tomorrow, but being 31, hopefully I have a lot of winters ahead to figure these things out.

~Taylor Ryan
My muse suffers from insomnia, and it keeps me up at night.

Good for you!

Personally I've never had this type of problem. Partially I just produce that much sebum, and partially probably because I'm sooooo good at staying hydrated. Me becoming dehydrated is literally impossible, because I reach for some water as soon as my mouth starts to feel even a little dry. As a result, I drink almost a gallon of water daily. Needless to say, I'm pretty sure that contributes to my skin not drying out as well. If anything, I could be at risk for OVER hydrating. Though so far I've been safe.

Abigail Drew.

Bag Balm

Patricia Marie Allen's picture

An older woman in our church was a bank teller and she complained of the money (bills, notes if you will) soaking the moisture out of her hands. She showed then to me and the palms were cracked and looked as if they had bled just a little. I advised her to use bag balm on her hands. It doesn't have pleasant odor, like the product mentioned her, but it's heavy duty for healing and moisturizing. She tried it just twice a day and reported it worked very well.

Bag balm is used to keep the udder of milk cows in good health. As you might imagine, cows can get scratches and cuts in that part of their anatomy. Hand cream is called "cream" because milk maids had very smooth hands compared to other farm workers and it was thought that it was because they came into contact with cream (as in butter fat from milk) in the process of their jobs. However it was because they applied a bag balm to the utters of the milk cows with their hands and derived benefits of it.

I keep some bag balm around and use it when my hands start getting dry and it's good for minor cuts and scrapes.

Hugs
Patricia

Happiness is being all dressed up and HAVING some place to go.
Semper in femineo gerunt

Glad you've found

Podracer's picture

something that works for you., and thanks for sharing.
I've found my hands (and heels) drying and cracking more in recent years, so I keep a bottle of hand cream at work to apply after every hand wash. Same stuff at home after showers, nitrile gloves or barrier cream or both for dirty jobs on the bike or car. I need to make sure the fingernails are short for the gloves though, or the fingers soon shred.

"Reach for the sun."

Depending where one is at what is available

BarbieLee's picture

My first choice is Vaseline from Walmart or any grocery or drug store.
CornHuskers lotion is another favorite
If one has a farm store in their locale search the vet supplies for skin softeners.
And we get to the things used for livestock
BagBalm is for using on the goat and cow udders to heal them when they crack. Works great on hands, elbows, and knees
Lanolin is used on the young uns when their ears or mouth dries out too much
The trade names for treatment will vary with what ones farm store is carrying for a particular product

None of it will carry a Tiffany label but it won't cost you for the name brand and it will do a heck of a lot better job.

Have fun with life. It's too short to take it seriously

Oklahoma born and raised cowgirl

Technically

Technically what I'm using is Vaseline Intensive Care. They have one with cocoa butter (giant brown bottle), or one with aloe (giant green bottle). I just prefer the cocoa butter smell over the aloe. Both are under $5 here, though, so I'm not breaking the bank on it. Seems to last forever too. lol

~Taylor Ryan
My muse suffers from insomnia, and it keeps me up at night.

Bag balm for hands and bums

Rhona McCloud's picture

I learnt that bag balm works wonders on hands while hand-milking cow and later saw what amounted to a medical version of the same product used to prevent bed-sores in elderly people. It is not recommended for human use but I have never heard of it causing problems.

Rhona McCloud

Question

Some interesting and good information in this thread.

But, one thing I don't see anyone talking about is the cotton gloves and socks.
How thick are the gloves/socks?
How much of [insert choice of cream/balm/etc] do you use?
Does it build up on the cotton garment quickly?
How often do you change/wash said gloves/socks used in your treatment?

Heck, where do you get the gloves/socks?
Any particular recommended brand/thickness/etc?

- Leona

More information

I didn't think to include this, but basically everything can be found at Walmart.

For the gloves, the more cotton the better, but these worked just fine for me: Gloves (They have a nice selection of colors.)

For socks, I just wear basic cotton socks. I like low cut ones personally: Socks (I like the different colors here too.)

I use Vaseline Intensive Care with cocoa butter (also at Walmart). Apply liberally (I actually do two applications). Avoid using a lot in between your toes (unless you wear toe socks). Too much moisture there can cause a fungal infection.

The gloves can actually survive a few applications before needing to be washed. I bought a few pairs to rotate. The socks I wash after each use. I'm kind of a sock junkie though, so I have a lot of pairs. lol Everything is machine wash though, so there isn't anything special to them.

Hope this helps. :)

~Taylor Ryan
My muse suffers from insomnia, and it keeps me up at night.

I see.

*nod* Thank you. :-)

- Leona