

Dr. Amanda Holden continues her Five Pillars of Aging series with the first and most foundational pillar: skin health. Before patients think about Botox, filler, lasers, or devices, Dr. Holden explains why the skin itself has to be healthy for any esthetic treatment to reach its full potential.
She compares skin to a canvas. Even the most beautiful colors cannot create their best result on a damaged canvas, and esthetics works the same way. Injections and technology can be powerful tools, but they become more effective when the skin is supported, protected, and cared for consistently.
Dr. Holden also explores the psychology behind aging and why so many people seek esthetic care in the first place. Many patients are not trying to look like someone else. They are trying to look more like the person they still feel they are inside. That disconnect between internal age and reflected age is part of what inspired her upcoming book, How to Hold Time Back.
Skin aging happens gradually. Collagen production slows, cell turnover decreases, sun damage accumulates, pigmentation becomes more visible, fine lines appear, hydration declines, and elasticity changes. Because these shifts happen over time, prevention also has to happen over time. Healthy skin is built through small, consistent choices repeated year after year.
For anyone starting from scratch, Dr. Holden recommends three essential skincare categories: an antioxidant, sunscreen, and a retinoid. Antioxidants help protect against environmental stress, sunscreen helps prevent visible aging caused by sun exposure, and retinoids support cell turnover, texture, and collagen production.
She also explains why medical grade skincare can make a meaningful difference. The goal is not to own endless products. The goal is to build a routine that works, fits the patient, and supports every treatment decision that may come later.



