Also, as stated early on in my posts, I promise to deliver the good, the bad and the ugly regarding my experience with TheAcnePractice. I do not, have not, and never will work for them. I am a real acne sufferer TRYING to be honest about this product line, but it's turned out to be quite annoying with the number of rude, cynical, suspicious, bitter people out there. Again I say, chill out. If something about my thread or experience offends you, kindly get off this page and move on with your life.
For those of you truly interested, read on.
TheAcnePractice regimen consists of three steps. All three products are "wash off" products, meaning, no topicals. I ordered the "medium" kit, so there's your point of reference of where I started. The three products/steps combine benzoyl peroxide with sulfur and other ingredients. There is no moisturizer allowed if you're truly following this "boot camp."
For the first month I tried to follow the boot camp to a T. The good news (as you can see from early pics), is that it started clearing me immediately. The bad news is, no matter what I tried, I could not get past how dry my skin was. Skipping steps, using water only, using less product for a shorter period of time, etc... I played with all the different suggestions made to me by Dr. Neal.
That's when my exit from the true bootcamp began, because I HAD to use a moisturizer. So... in the end, after more tweaking of my regimen, what I've settled on is (weirdly), a combination of using one of TheAcnePractice's products, combined with the DKR found here. Keep in mind that I had been on DKR for years, and the pics I showed you in my first post what how bad my skin was, even on DKR. There is definitely something very powerful about TheAcnePractice products, even though I personally couldn't remain on their bootcamp.
My regimen:
- Wash with TheAcnePractice Medium Acne Cleanser
- (for those wanting ingredients, this is a 5% BP wash, which also includes great burdock, eryslmum, citric acid, glycolic acid, and zinc. Inactive ingredients are water, ammonium laryl sulfate, disodium cocoamphodacetate, butylene glycol, carbomer, polysorbate-20, sodium hydrocide, caprylyl gycol, potassium sorbate, chloroxylenol, fragrance, glycerin, sclerotium gum, sisymbrium officinate extract, arclium lappa root extract, citric acid, glycolic acid, zinc pca.)
- Moisturize with Neutrogena Oil-Free Moisture for Sensitive Skin
- Use Small Amount of Dan's BP
- (I also use a small amount of TheAcnePractice's step 2 to spot treat bumps, if I have any. Step 2 is a sulfur/clay-like product which is amazing, but too drying for me to wash with as bootcamp suggests)
The Good: I'm clear!
The Bad: Bootcamp alone dried my skin beyond what I could tolerate, and for some reason, I broke out on one area of my face with tiny blackheads (an area I had never had issues with before, plus I never got blackheads before.) This is what made me incorporate Dan's BP back in... seemed to me that having a leave-on topical was something I needed, and I was right.... as soon as I started back up with a BP topical, the skin finished clearing up. (but again, I had been using Dan's BP for years prior to starting bootcamp, so it's not Dan's BP that cleared me... it was finding the exact perfect combo of products for MY skin)...
My personal verdict: TOTALLY worth every penny, because it gave me an entire tool chest of acne products to work with/experiment with. Yes, I settled on only using one of their products, but even through all the experimenting/adjusting, my skin was clearing. I went from hundreds of bumps down to just a couple, and my spots are fading away. New pics below, take today... just about three months since starting all this.
So take it for what it's worth... this is my personal experience. You can say it's not real, freak out, knock it, whatever.... but that's laughable to me as I sit here with clear skin, which is very, very REAL indeed. Best wishes to all who are looking to become clear.


atan, on 21 November 2011 - 09:31 AM, said:



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