Home
Homepage Forums Advertise with Us Gallery Register Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read


Go Back   TanToday - Tanning Salon Business Forum > Site Info/General Discussion > News About Tanning

Visit Our Sponsors!

News About Tanning Find out what the media is saying about the indoor tanning industry. Note: Please start a new thread in the private forum to discuss articles of a sensitive nature.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 2nd January 2008, 06:45 PM   #1 (permalink)
Veteran
 
Beat's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 289
Default Helios Or Bust: Forget Cancer, The Sun Is The Cornerstone Of Life

The demonization of the sun is one of the greatest tragedies of our time.We slather ourselves with protective lotions, fearful of looming cancers and ruined skin, when the fact is that our origins lie in lands washed by sunshine, our health depends on exposure, and the lack of it is likely to destroy our health.
The cradle of man can be found in sun-drenched equatorial Africa. Every geographic step away the species has taken, and every extra layer of clothing or interfering shelter that has come between us and sol since has been a mistake. Our health, and mental states are damaged by the absence from sun in our lives, and we need only look to the past to see it.
The Egyptians, Greeks, Assyrians, Romans, Babylonians, and other ancient Mediterranean cultures realized the central place that the sun played in their life. All had a sun god as a central member of their pantheon, they revered the sun as the cornerstone of their existence, and realized its health giving properties. The earliest Egyptian temple we’ve found was constructed more than 5,000 years ago in the city of On. It was, unsurprisingly, a temple to the sun. Later, the name of the city was changed to Heliopolis, or city of the sun.
Egyptians built sun gardens, the Greeks had helioses, and the Romans constructed their Solaria. All were measures to fortify the body with sun rays. Hippocrates, who is hailed as the father of modern medicine, but whose curative ideas are ignored by our drug-happy culture, built the great sanitarium of Hippocrates on the Island of Cos with a large solarium attached to heal with sunlight. “Sol est remediorum maximum,” or, the sun is the best remedy, is a line that Pliny the younger gave us in the first century A.D.
Olympic athletes as well as gladiators were instructed to sun bath and train in the sun, as it was believed to increased muscle size and strength. The Roman’s Germanic and Gaulish enemies placed their sick children on roofs of buildings and on hill sides to heal in the sun.
Times changed. The nudity and scanty clothing favoured by the early Mediterranean cultures faded away when the prudish notions of the dark ages took hold. Those located further away from the equator had little choice, as the weather was harsh.
Though sun bathing was suggested by Sylvester Graham, an advocate for vegetarian diets and hygienic living, he was widely ignored in 19th century America along with the handful of other doctors who were busy healing people naturally by taking a step back and letting nature do its best.
Science Is Catching Up.
Finally, scientists and doctors are starting rediscover this old knowledge and are scientifically tracking the effect of the sun on the mind and the body.
If you don’t get enough sun, your mind is likely having some problems. This New York Times article shows how we’re like most other mamals that have trouble with a lack of sun rays. Consider that the states that have less sun have a higher prevalence of depression- only 1.4 percent of the residents of Florida report SAD problems, while 9.7 percent of those in New Hampshire do. Further north, Scandinavians average about 20 percent winter depression.
Over a million prescriptions for antidepressants are filled each week in the US, and annual sales are at about $11 billion. Few take the time to consider a more natural way. Dr. Joel Fuhrman on the affects of sun exposure and diet on depression:
… Natural therapies are surprisingly effective. Recent advances in non-pharmacologic treatments for depression can help people feel better—and even assist them in making total recovery—without dependence on medications. Researchers doing the studies in this field have been surprised to find that natural therapies can have very high success rates, rivaling those of drugs. Of particular interest is the fact that these non-pharmacologic treatments get results faster than drug treatments. Now is the time for all people with depression to give these safe, natural treatments a try. By combining the most promising facets of these approaches, the likelihood of improvement and recovery is greatly enhanced.
As a further kick to the head of everyone that’s been linking the sun to cancer, we’re now hearing new research showing how sunlight fights and prevents lung cancer, ovarian cancer, breast cancer, and even skin cancer. Additionally, it appears that it fights MS. This is just a small sampling, but the true benefits are the sun are far wider. Vitamin C is now recognized to be a poor building of bones when not combined with vitamin D from the sun, for instance.
Dr. James C. Jackson said nearly two centuries ago that: “The more a man lives in sunlight, other things being equal, the more vigorous will his brain be; the more vigorous this, the more energetic and competent to their office will his mental faculties be.”
It certainly increases athletic ability as well. My own performance always takes a turn for the better during the warmer months when I go out and sunbath regularly.
In “Fasting and Sun Bathing,” Dr. Herbert Shelton wrote that the sun “not only adds to the size and qualities of the muscles, it increases the calcium in them and adds to their enduring powers. The firmness of the athletic muscle requires calcium in considerable amounts. Such muscles contain far more calcium than flabby ones. After exercise their calcium content is diminished. Muscles subjected to proper sun exposure grow larger, firmer, and have their contractile powers enhanced even without exercise, due partly to the increase of lime in them, and partly to improved nutrition in general.”
How To Take Advantage Of The Sun
The concept of tanning was once foreign to me. There was a time when I was simply burnt at nearly any lengthy exposure to the sun, and my skin was pale year round. If you look at me today, however, you’ll see someone who becomes darkly tan in the midst of summer. I’m bronzed, I look and feel healthy, and a really don’t burn at all.
One of the biggest factors is diet, particularly fat content. When I originally went vegan, I noticed that I could suddenly tan. It was as if a switch had been thrown. As I started eliminating oils, margarines, and other fats, my situation improved further. On a diet centred around raw fruits and vegetables, with only occasional fats from nuts an seeds, I’ve pretty much become burn proof.
The other factor in this is gradual exposure. Even in the winter, amongst snow banks and cool breezes, I make it a point to expose some of my body to the sun, which is, though weakened at this time or year, intensified by glancing off the snow. In this way I keep a nice “minimum” tan year round. This helps me avoid a burn when I suddenly start getting more sun exposure in spring and summer.
When warm weather arrives, you should gradually build up tolerance. 10-20 minutes of sun bathing is more than enough to start up. This can be increased by a few minutes a week, however, until you can spend several hours in the sun with no burn. Stay away from sun screen, as it blocks the suns rays. Better to put on clothing if you need to protect yourself.
Sun burn is always to be avoided, as it can damage your skin and cause skin diseases. Sun is only healthy up to the point that it burns. White-skinned people like myself have evolved in northern latitudes and have fairer skin to better absorb the weak rays . This helps us stay healthy, but also puts us at risk. Those with darker skin tones are luckier, as it’s harder for them to burn, but if they live up north, it’s also more challenging for them to get enough sun during much of the year. They have to take special precaution to expose themselves enough.
I’m sure some of you will be unconvinced by my argument. I myself had doubts. While originally considering the need for sun exposure and doing research, I though of the movies of desert people like those found in Morocco that I had seen on TV. In this sun-drenched land, fairly young individuals often had skin like leather, and looked far older than their years. This contradicted the idea that the sun kept you young and healthy. I eventually consulted Dr. Douglas Graham, who a natural hygiene doctor who supports sun exposure and a raw food diet. He said: “There is no way to look at the people you mention and blame their sun exposure. Their lifestyle and food style is harsh, at best. They smoke, they drink, they eat meat, they eat almost all of their food cooked.”
He makes a good point. Sun is only one aspect of health, and cannot be looked at out of proportion to the other follies that ruin man’s health like diet, lack of sleep, alcohol, and stress.
But do yourself a favor and get out in the sun as much as you can. You’ll be healthier and happier for the effort.

source: http://www.lifecrafting.net/2008/01/...stone-of-life/
__________________
"Progress is made by lazy men looking for easier ways to do things." - Robert A. Heinlein
Beat is online now   Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:02 PM.
 



Copyright © 2009 by Virgo Publishing LLC, all rights reserved.
P.O. Box 40079, Phoenix, AZ 85067-0079
Phone: 480-990-1101 - Email: admin@tantoday.com
Privacy statement Terms of use