By Lea Tein
Summer’s coming, and we need to get ourselves looking very svelte and healthy. How do we do it? We sign ourselves up for a couple of tanning sessions. But do they really help us in this ongoing need to go with the flow and look beautiful?
Why do we have to always look are best? Why can’t it be enough to have a natural glow of happiness and contentment coming from inside of us? Beauty isn’t all it seems. More than a million Americans are diagnosed with skin cancer every year. This has doubled in numbers in the past 30 years by an increase of tanning. “I wish I was more tanned, but I don’t want mutated skin and a chance of having skin cancer,” states Shea McKeown. A tan is your skin’s reaction to damaging sun light. Eye problems such as cataracts are also not uncommon when over exposed to the powerful UVB and UVA rays.
You increase your risks for melanoma, the most dangerous of skin cancers, by eight times over your lifetime by using tanning beds. People believe that getting a tan artificially is better than lying out in the sun, when in fact; ultraviolet rays can be even more dangerous when it comes from a tanning parlor. Now, around 60,000 new cases of melanoma are diagnosed in the US each year. Melanoma can be cured if it is diagnosed and treated early. If it is not removed in its early stages, cancer cells may grow downward from the skin surface and invade healthy tissue. If it spreads to other parts of your body it is extremely hard to control. 5 billion dollars US is spent each year in tanning salons. Why do people spend so much when it may end up killing them?
Warm, luxurious sunlight is why people gather at public beaches and swarm tanning salons. They want to have fun in the sun as well as put on a ‘healthy’ glow. “Tanning parlors are bad because the radiation from the lights give you cancer. But I think sun tanning is ok, if you don’t abuse the rays, because you get vitamin D,” said Isfeld student Ariel. Exposure to sun light is important for the production of vitamin D which is critical to have normal blood levels of calcium and phosphorus and to maintain strong bones. Of course we need certain amounts of sun light (about 20 minutes per day), so you have to be careful of the amount your skin is absorbing.
Sun is fine in moderation, but no amount of time in a tanning bed is healthy. In the end you will never “look young” when you’re old, because your face will be a mass of wrinkles. You may be thirty looking sixty or seventy… that is if melanoma hasn’t already taken its toll on you, confining you to a lifetime indoors, permanently afraid of the sun.






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