This is a recent photo of one of our many adorable grandchildren, Colt and Heather's little Ember Elizabeth. Please forgive me, but I just had to share.
#88 – “Never mash pimples. 
You'll make scars.”
It is such a dirty trick that nature plays, causing teens to
have pimples at a point in their lives when they so desperately need to feel
good about themselves. What is that, a test, a measure of character, a character
builder? Whatever, it is just wrong. 
I was one of the fortunate teens with relatively few
pimples, but I do recall fixating over, and “pinching” the ones I had, leaving
telltale fingernail dents and red dots. I also remember feeling diseased and
ugly, yet very fortunate that my pimples, zits, whatever you want to call them,
were minor compared to some of my friends’.
My generation possessed a comparative dearth of information about
just about everything, including pimples. All we knew was what our parents told
us, which was “wash your face and don’t pinch.” Then television entered our
lives about the time my friends and I were entering puberty, assuring us that Clearasil
and Noxzema would make our pimples magically disappear, which was a lie. Then
when my kids were teens, Accutane came along, with all the dire warnings that
it would cause birth defects, and pimples became a scourge of the past, if you
had the money to buy the Accutane that is.
When I Googled “acne” to see what I could learn, I got 128,000,000
results, which is mind-boggling. I found out
that the most common type of acne is “acne vulgaris” which seems crudely named.
What I didn’t realize is that vulgaris, which I associate with the word vulgar,
is actually the Greek word for “common.” The information online is vast,
interesting and helpful, but the photos are heartbreaking. Click On Read More Below...
