Sure, a few minutes steaming in the shower could help clear your sinuses -- but spending that time with your precious pillow is pretty enticing, too. To get a little extra rest without leaving home looking like a grease ball, quickly revive your hair by spraying it with a light coat of dry shampoo, such as TreSemme Fresh Start, $6. Or whip up a two-minute updo: Gather hair at the nape of the neck, then twist once while lifting upward. Secure the base with a hair clamp, like Goody Easy Style Claw Hair Clips, $4 for two. Let the hair fall down over the clip, then secure it with bobby pins.
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Stop and Smell the Roses
Well, the rose water at least. Rosewater (available in health food stores for about $5) is a staple in Campain's kit for the invigorating feeling it gives her clients, but it also has other benefits: Its natural oils lock the moisture it delivers in, while its anti-inflammatory properties can ease skin irritation. Natural medicine practitioners have also long touted it as a fever reducer.
Spritz it on your face before and after makeup application, first to hydrate, then to set (you can also spritz whenever you feel the need to cool down during the day).
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Germ-Bust Wisely
Washing your hands often or using an antibacterial gel is a great way to de-bug your hands after wiping your nose, but doing so over and over again can be drying, causing your hands to not only look older, but your nail beds to become so thirsty that your cuticles peel and crack. Continue your healthy habit, suggests Baldwin, but just squirt on a soap or gel that has added skin-nourishing ingredients, like Bath & Body Works Anti-bacterial Moisturizing Hand Soap, $6, or Jurlique Moisturizing Hand Sanitizer, $7.
As a kid, trying to look less sick would have been a seriously dumb idea. One glimpse of your red nose, watery eyes, and pale skin and mom would insist that you stay home watching cartoons in your jammies. Score!
And while a day spent on the couch attending to a full DVR probably sounds pretty great now, too, odds are your busy calendar means you can't take sick days. When the sniffles hit and you can't stay home, the only thing worse than feeling crummy is mustering up the effort to drag yourself out of bed and out the door only to hear the inevitable "you look awful." Um, right -- and that comment is supposed to make me feel better?
Whether you're headed to an all-eyes-on-you presentation at work, a date that's too late to break, or you simply would rather not hit the streets looking like an extra on "The Walking Dead," our tips on how to look healthy even when you're sick will help you become a master of disguise. Some may even help you feel a little more like yourself again, too.