With summer just around the  corner, many  are looking forward to soaking up the rays, and baking  their skin to the  perfect shade of bronze.  But it is important to  remember the dangers  of the sun.  
On  the  superficial level, sunbathing is the most cosmetically damaging  thing we  can do to our skin, even beyond the effects of smoking  (however, doing  meth can also ruin your skin).  "Up to 90 percent of  the visible changes  commonly attributed to aging are caused by the sun"  according to the   U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.  It causes  premature wrinkling,  age spots (also called sunspots, liver spots, lentigo simplex and senile lentigines), uneven skin tone, depletes collagen in the skin, causing it to appear loose and saggy. 
Lets   not overlook the greatest danger of sun exposure, cancer.   Allow me  to  share a shocking and tragic story of a young man whose life was cut   short by skin cancer.  (WARNING: This story includes an image that may be troubling for some)Marine   Sgt. Carmelo Rodriguez served his country  for almost ten years, also   completing a tour of duty in Iraq.  The country he loved so much to  risk  his life for, repaid him for his service with outright medical   negligence, which resulted in his highly preventable death. 
Upon   enlisting in the U.S. Marine Corps, Rodriguez received a routine    medical exam.  His doctors diagnosed a blotch on his buttock as melanoma    but never told him, and the military never followed up.  Over the  next   eight years, the melanoma continued to grow until, while serving  in   Iraq, Rodriguez had it examined again.  This time, he was told that  it   was just a wart and that he should have it examined upon returning  to   the U.S.  
Tragically,  by  then, it was too late, and Rodriguez died 18  months later from  skin  cancer, holding the hand of his seven-year-old  son.  His  once-buff  physique had been whittled down to less than 80 pounds in 18  months by  stage 4 melanoma. 
Sgt. Carmelo Rodriguez was 19 years old when a military doctor first noticed the melanoma (but failed to take any action in order to treat the cancer or even to notify Rodriguez of his diagnosis) on his right buttock. At 29 years of age, Rodriguez succumbed to his illness.
People often associate skin cancer with the elderly, young Caucasian girls who abuse tanning beds, the fair skinned and freckled redheads. This was a young man of Hispanic dissent. He was, young, fit, healthy, and far from what is commonly associated with any risk factor for skin cancer. (I am choosing not to address at this time the horrifying negligence on the part of the U.S. military. That is a different topic, reserved for a separate article)
Some quick facts about skin cancer:
- Skin cancer is the most common form of cancer in the United states.
 - Every year 1 million Americans are diagnosed with skin cancer.
 - One in five Americans will develop skin cancer in the course of a lifetime.
 - Melanoma is the most common form of cancer for young adults 25-29 years old.
 
Here are some signs to watch out for: 
I hope I have changed some minds out there about sunbathing. 
http://www.skinsight.com/diseaseGroups/sunDamage.htm
http://www.skincancer.org/Skin-Cancer-Facts/





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