Pure Beginnings Fun Time Bubble Bath Review

Every little girl and boy deserves bubbles. What’s more fun than a bath filled with millions of bubbles (for young and old)? It sucks that Cara has sensitive, eczema-prone skin and hardly ever has a bubble bath. I’ve seen Pure Beginnings products in pharmacies and online and I have been tempted to try the bubble bath, but I’ve never gotten around to it. Then Cara received a surprise parcel on Friday. My little girl and I enjoyed 3 bubble-filled baths over the weekend.

Pure Beginnings Fun Time Bubble Bath Review

Pure Beginnings Organic Kids Fun Time Bubble Bath Review Pretty Please Charlie

‘Pure Beginnings Organic Skin Care believes in keeping your skin as pure as the day
you were born by providing effective, organically formulated skin care
products that care for you and your family’s skin, and are not harmful to the environment
giving you peace of mind from the beginning.’

Pure Beginnings Fun Time Bubble Bath is an absolute treat and perfect for sensitive skins. Both Cara and myself suffer from eczema so I have to be very wary of the bath and body products we use. This bubble bath left us feeling soft, smooth and squeaky clean (without the squeak). And there was no negative reaction. Cara had millions of bubbles to play with and they lasted very well. Pretty great as the product does not contains SLS. The scent of Fun Time Bubble Bath is lovely – a delightful combination of citrus, geranium and ylang-ylang. I am in love and so is Cara.

Pure Beginnings Fun Time Bubble Bath retails for R61.50 and is available at Baby City, Wellness Warehouse and selected online and health stores.

Visit Pure Beginnings HERE to learn more about their other fab products.

xoxo

Disclosure ranking: 2. Images belong to Pure Beginnings.

How do you define beauty?

I bought myself a little mid-evil torture device which was delivered yesterday. I was extremely excited about it; until I saw the couple of hundred micro needles on the derma roller. I showed it to my husband, and of course his response what that I am completely out of my mind. Why would I want to willingly puncture my face with needles, all in the name of ‘beauty’? Is it because I want healthier skin? Or because some days I don’t recognise the 37 year old staring back at me in the mirror? I feel 25 dammit. Or is it purely vanity?

Am I going to use the derma roller? Yes! If I was offered botox, would I try it? Hell yes! Why though? Because I think smoother, less wrinkly skin would make me feel more confident. Is it about self-esteem, or egotism? Fine line.

How do you define beauty?

Even as I am typing this, I am not quite sure of the direction of this post. I surely don’t want to spark a debate. Enough drama on Twitter of late and there’s enough shaming and impossible beauty standards out there. What I do want, is your opinion. Your idea of beauty.

How do you define beauty?

A recent Dove campaign asked mothers about their beauty legacy- the way that moms feel about their own beauty has a great influence on how the girls in their lives will feel about themselves. This is something that I am very aware of as I am my own biggest hater. I don’t want my little girl to see the tears in my eyes when I look at my fat ass in the mirror just before we go to the beach. All she should remember is that her mom put on that pair of shorts and built sandcastles with her. This post isn’t really about the Dove campaign, but it is one of the things that got me thinking about the idea beauty.

What does the word beauty mean to you?

I want it to mean a healthy body and body image and embracing the physical that makes me, me. Not that easy though. If it was, then I wouldn’t stare at each individual wrinkle whilst doing my make-up in the morning wishing it wasn’t there. Perhaps then I would see that wrinkle as a sign of life. And perhaps a bit of wisdom. Maybe then I wouldn’t constantly try to hide my ugly, wrinkly hands from people. You see, I hate my hands. I always have. Recently I realised that they are my mom’s. There are pictures where you can hardly distinguish between the two of us. My mom’s hands are the loving hands that cared for me when I was sick, that held me when I was sad and clapped for me when I made her proud. I love those hands. Then why don’t I love my own? Just because they aren’t ‘pretty’?  Again I ask, is it just plain vanity? I also want beauty to mean having a kind and giving heart. My hands care, love and protect, yet I still only see the unsightly, crapey skin.

How do you define beauty? Pretty Please Charleie

What about those features that make you stand out? I have wild, curly hair that I finally made peace with and started to love when I was in my twenties. I get many compliments, but so many people still ask me why I don’t straighten my hair. My little girl has my hair. I love it. I will do my damn best to ensure that she loves those curls to. I love the fact that it makes her stand out a bit.

Why do we often feel like we want to/need to downplay the attributes that make us stand out?

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I use an online site to add text to my images. One of the elements this site offers, is a ‘photoshop’ type feature and the ad to showcase how great it works, removes a woman’s freckles. Now this woman is gorgeous in her ‘before’ picture. Her freckles are beautiful. But then they go and take away one of the features that make her who she is. I think it totally robs her of her beauty.

Ramble over ;) Now I hand the mic over to you… tell me what you think. And be honest. Do you wear make-up because it’s fun (and it is!) or to hide? Do you work out because you love the endorphin rush and you want to be healthy, or do you sweat for hours just because you want to look better than the girl next to you on the beach? Do you perhaps want to lose weight? Is it for yourself or someone else? Do you think beauty only comes from the inside and screw what the rest think? Do you celebrate your uniqueness or do you hide it from the world?

What is your definition of beauty?

xoxo

Images: Sourced from Google