England. Blogger Tracy Kiss, from Wendover, Buckinghamshire, is not only known for her modeling stints, but also for her advocacy of promoting natural beauty treatments. She uses her blog to share her fashion, beauty, and fitness tips to all her 150 thousand followers.
One of the beauty methods that made her very popular is the “sperm facial.” She spreads this “natural cosmetic” on her face once a week and documents the result of the regimen on her website.
The 28-year-old mother of two said she gets the supply from her friend, Ben, who maintains a healthy lifestyle and has been tested for STDs. He would deliver it in a clean container which she then applies to her face.
“I can imagine that to some, the thought of using a semen facial mask may turn stomachs,” Tracy wrote on her blog. Then she further explained that she sees semen as being a “fresh, active and stimulating ingredient, which gives my skin the glow and freshness that I require for a healthy skincare regime for my sensitive condition.”
The idea came after talking to her beauty therapist on how she could ease her rosacea, a skin condition she has had since birth that causes permanent redness, premature ageing, and skin abnormalities.
The blogger researched about the popularity of the treatment in the US and decided to go for the natural, “manmade” product.
Kiss explained that the semen should be applied by rubbing it on the face in a circular motion and then leaving it on for about twenty minutes before rinsing it off with water.
“It feels like a face pack that pulls the skin inwards, it feels so glossy to wipe it off. It’s like having a kind of oil on the face or a wax where it just glides beautifully against the water. It’s so cooling and soothing,” she said.
Aside from Kiss, 53-year-old Hollywood actress, Heather Locklear, also confessed that the secret to her youthful glow is using sperm for her facial.
However, Dr. Will Kirby, a dermatologist from Beverly Hills, claimed that there is no proof that a man’s spunk has positive dermatological benefits. He even warned about human seminal plasma protein hypersensitivity where an individual can develop an allergy to one or more of the proteins in semen which may result in allergic contact dermatitis or worse, the possibility of STD if the sperm donor is infected.
Featured images via www.tracykiss.com/bucksherald.co
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