From brushing your hair 100 times, to drinking a gallon of water a day to plump up your skin -- we've all heard anti-aging advice from our mothers and grandmothers. And the same thing holds true for women across the globe, in many different cultures.
Women all over the world are proving you can age well and gracefully, and you don't have to go under the knife or spend your entire paycheck on a fancy new anti-aging cream.
"Other cultures take advantage of natural ingredients,"
dermatologist Joshua Zeichner told The Huffington Post. Zeichner says in the U.S. we're beginning to embrace many beauty rituals from around the world by incorporating key ingredients into our existing skincare routines.
From the glowing skin of women in Latin America to the clear complexions of our friends in Asia, we've rounded up the best anti-aging treatments from cultures around the world.
What's your anti-aging beauty trick? Share with us in comments.
China
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Many teas are high in anti-aging antioxidants. White tea and green tea are rich in an antioxidant known as EGCG, which helps battle wrinkles and helps
increase cell turnover. The Chinese
mix green tea powder into brewed white tea to create a face mask. Apply this to your face to help
fight wrinkles and load your skin with plumping antioxidants.
India
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Start the day off like
women in India, with a warm cup of ginger tea.
Mix some shredded ginger and honey into some hot water. A cup of this tea is loaded with anti-aging benefits. Honey has natural anti-bacterial properties and helps reduce inflammation. Ginger is rich in an antioxidant called
gingerol, which helps protect against collagen breakdown.
Mexico
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It's well known that our hands are one of the first things that give away our age. The skin on our hands loses its elasticity and fullness. In Mexico, women
mix together sugar and lemon juice to create a scrub for the hands. The sugar crystals act as an exfoliant to helping slough away dull dead skin. Lemon juice contains
alpha hydroxy acid, found in many anti-aging treatments, which also helps peel away the layer of dead skin cells. "When you exfoliate, your moisturizers penetrate better. In the more mature population, we don't shed our skin as effectively and so exfoliating can be helpful," dermatologist Susan Weinkle told The Huffington Post.
Polynesia
You may have heard of
noni juice as a hot, new beauty product that
models are raving about. But it's actually been around for thousands of years, being indigenous to the southeastern part of the globe. Polynesians use the fruit for its moisturizing,
anti-aging properties.
Studies have shown that it's effective in softening the appearance of crow's feet, fine lines, and wrinkles.
France
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