

YOUR SKIN PLAN
PHASE ONE
The focus for this first phase is to calm inflammation, support your skin barrier, reduce internal stress signals and get your foundations more consistent.
Because you have previously been on Roaccutane and your breakouts have started to return over the past couple of years, we want to look at the full picture rather than just throwing stronger products at the skin.
Your current key focus areas are:
- Supporting your skin barrier
- Improving bowel regularity
- Supporting blood sugar balance
- Reducing sunbed use
- Calming the nervous system
- Creating simple AM and PM habits that work around shift work
Important note on sunbeds
I know sunbeds can feel like they dry breakouts out short term, but they are not a safe or long-term solution for acne.
Sunbeds expose the skin to concentrated UV radiation, which can damage skin cell DNA, increase premature ageing, worsen pigmentation and increase skin cancer risk. For your skin specifically, sunbeds can also make post breakout marks last longer, increase redness, dehydrate the barrier and make the skin more reactive over time. Rather than trying to stop everything overnight, I would like you to start reducing from once per week to once every 2 weeks, then work towards stopping completely. We can replace the “I feel better with colour” feeling with safer options like gradual tan, spray tan or tinted SPF.
No tan is worth stressing your skin or your long-term health for.

YOUR
LIFESTYLE
You described stress as medium, but also said you always feel on edge. That “on edge” feeling is often a sign your body is spending a lot of time in fight or flight.
This can affect-
Skin inflammation
Oil production
Sleep quality
Digestion
Cravings
Hormonal balance
So the goal is not to remove all stress, because life doesn’t work like that. The goal is to teach your body how to come back down.
WHY SLEEP MATTERS
Sleep isn’t passive.
It’s your body’s most powerful repair window.
And this is exactly why chronic stress + poor sleep = flare-ups.
When sleep is fragmented or shortened:
Cortisol regulation becomes disrupted
Deep sleep shortens (less repair)
REM reduces (less emotional processing)
Blood sugar becomes unstable
Inflammation increases
Sleep hygiene is not complicated.
It is about environment, rhythm, and small daily behaviours.
Before assuming a client has “insomnia,” I always assess their sleep environment and routine. More often than not, the issue isn’t inability to sleep — it’s misaligned habits.
Poor sleep hygiene creates a cascade:
Disrupted cortisol rhythm →
Poor food choices →
Missed morning light →
Blood sugar instability →
Increased inflammation →
Skin flare-ups
Sleep affects everything.
SLEEP
HYGIENE
WHY IT MATTERS

A SIMPLE DAILY SLEEP FRAMEWORK
Take a moment to think about your current sleep environment and evening habits. What temperature is your bedroom at night? Do you mainly use bright overhead lighting in the evening, or softer lamps and lower lighting? Are there standby lights glowing from televisions, chargers, or other devices in the room? Do you usually scroll on your phone or watch television within an hour of going to bed? Is your phone kept beside your bed, and if so, is it on flight mode? Are your windows always closed, leaving the room feeling warm or stuffy overnight?
Many people are unintentionally disrupting their sleep through small habits and environmental factors they barely notice day to day. But when sleep quality is disrupted, the body’s ability to repair, regulate hormones, recover, and restore the nervous system is disrupted too. Take note of any habits that currently apply to you, and from there we can start looking at simple, supportive changes to improve them over time.
