There's a sentence Ida says often when a client asks why their skin is suddenly behaving differently: "Skin tells on you."

What it's telling on isn't a product. It's almost always one of three things. Diet — the second coffee, the wine on Wednesdays, the dairy that crept back in. Environment — the new air conditioning at work, the dryness of an Amarillo summer, sleeping closer to a fan. And emotions — a stressful month at work, sleep that hasn't been deep, grief or change that hasn't been processed.

Skin is the largest organ. It mirrors what's happening inside more reliably than most people give it credit for. That's why a Juno facial includes a real conversation, not just a treatment plan. Ida wants to understand what's changed since your last visit before deciding what your skin needs this time.

A facial that doesn't ask is just a service. A facial that does ask is a relationship.