Pulse August 2020 | Page 21

“It makes me laugh when people tell me that they can buy CBD anywhere. You can buy a face cleanser anywhere, too. It doesn’t mean it’s the same quality.” — HANNAH DUNCAN reliever and anti-inflammatory, properties that naturally piqued the interest of those in the spa industry. Demystifying CBD Heather Kreider, who co-founded Pennsylvania-based Hempfield Botanicals with her husband Nathan, notes that education has played a big role in that shift. “Educating our consumers and our spa partners on that specific stigma is something we very much pride ourselves on. It’s very quickly going away.” Those shifting attitudes toward CBD and the spa industry’s rising interest in it have been clear to Jaclyn Luongo for a while now. Luongo, a licensed esthetician and esthetics educator, suspected that CBD was more than a trendy ingredient when she witnessed students’ eagerness to learn more about it. “Students are the ones really hungry for whatever is out there, and whatever knowledge and education that has to do with ingredients or results, they’re going to seek it,” she says. “That’s where I really started to see the demand a couple of years ago with students asking, ‘Are we going to learn about CBD?’ ‘What skin type is it best for?’ ‘What is the right percentage of [CBD]?’‘How do we know what’s good? What’s bad?’” Questions like these, Luongo notes, are a byproduct of therapists and service providers’ natural process of constantly evaluating new techniques and ingredients in search of better outcomes for their clients. “We’re seekers and researchers at heart in the spa industry, so we know ingredients. The industry never stops growing, learning, evolving, so of course an esthetician is going to want to learn about [CBD] and have the most current, innovative options to provide for their clients.” As massage therapists, estheticians, nail technicians and other service providers continue learning more about the use of CBD and integrate it more frequently into their treatments, they pass that knowledge along to spa-goers who receive those treatments, and those spa-goers may be more likely to integrate CBD products into their overall wellness routine and seek out treatments that utilize it. That cycle is critical to bringing CBD fully into the mainstream because it allows consumers to experience the potential benefits of the ingredients under the CONTINUED ON PAGE 19 AUGUST 2020 ■ PULSE 17