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by taeric 1837 days ago
Neat. Curious how to interpret this when you are tanned some. My understanding is that doesn't change your skin type, but you do build some resistance. That not the case?
3 comments

You have a base level of resistance determined by your genes. When you get burned you tan and that burn is a function of time spent out in sun multipliednby that base protection. Tanning is our bodies response to the damage done by this as a form of preventing more damage. The damage however is accumulative.
This makes since sense, but still feels too simplified. I used to spend many hours outside and basically developed a skin type that was easily two types higher than I have normally. When this happened, I found I could definitely do longer without a hat or other sun shades with no negative impact.

Fast forward a few years and I'm back to where the first few days mowing the yard will see me get burned. Give it a few weeks and I can go longer without a hat.

You repeatedly damaged your skin to maintain the tan.
I get that. But some damage is different from other damage. Getting callouses is similar to getting blisters. But one is much worse for you. (With the other being somewhat beneficial...)

So my question is how bad is it, really? Straw man arguments of folks being ridiculously tanned from tanning beds aside, is there much trustable discussion over mild tans?

Edit: Probably better asked in terms of my blister analogy. Is there benefit to getting tanned similar to building up callouses? Or is it purely cosmetic?

Getting burned once in a two year time span triples your risk of developing melanoma compared to not getting burned at all. That base level obviously depends on your genetics.
That is getting burned. Is tanning:burning the same as callouses:blisters?

I suppose I am assuming callouses aren't really bad for you? Is that not true?

This article seems to say that getting a base tan helps to get 3-4 SPF, so your time-to-sunburn increases up to 4 times. https://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/problem-tanning-myth-bas...

I would not rely on it overall tough.

That was the first thing I wondered too. My skin is Type I or lighter going by the chart. But my neck and arms and face are much darker from a life spend outside. It says I can only go outside for seven minutes without sunscreen, which i believe if i was at the beach, but I know I can go outside much longer than that in a t-shirt without any burn.
You are repeatedly damaging your skin which is why it's darker.
You are repeatedly damaging your muscles and tendons in the gym which is why they become bigger, stronger and denser. So where does that leave us?
How many times have you heard of someone getting muscle cancer from going to the gym?
Are you dumb or just a troll?