THAT WONDERFUL SUNTAN
By Randy Rawls
I only lived a few blocks from the
municipal pool, so each afternoon I was in and out of the water—well, each day
that I could convince Mom or Dad to give me the ten cents admission fee. Usually,
after telling me all the reasons I couldn't go, the dime was forthcoming, along
with numerous warnings to stay safe. And I got darker.
That's not to say it was play all the
time. I had chores. We had an old push mower and it was my job to cut the
grass. Note I didn't say mow the lawn. First, that mower was so inefficient and
cranky, it only cut sporadically, and second, we didn't really have a lawn. But
we did have open areas around the house where wild grass and weeds survived. So
there I went, pushing that rotary lawn mower back and forth, using some rather expressive
language to let the mower and the weeds know how I felt their existence. And I
got darker.
During those years, I discovered the
local library. So on the days I wasn't swimming or playing cowboys and Indians,
I'd jump on my bike, race to the library, check out a book, and soon be
stretched out on a towel reading. And I got darker.
The years rolled forward, and I became a
teenager. Everyone said the girls went for the outdoorsy-looking, macho guys so
at every opportunity I worked to tan. Shorts and flip-flops. That was standard
attire most of the time. And I got darker.
The rest of my life pretty much followed
that pattern. Soak up as much sun as possible. I measured my
"healthiness" by how dark I could get during the summer months, no
matter where I was.
Until about ten years ago. That's when
my doctor first noticed a spot he didn't like. He suggested I go to a
dermatologist, and I've been going at least every six months since. The
dermatologists have changed as I've moved around, but the procedures have remained
constant—freezing and slicing. My latest doctor is an energetic young woman
(everyone is young from my vantage point) who always has a canister of frozen nitrogen
in one hand and a double-edged razor blade in the other when she comes into the
room. And she's adept at using both of them—and gets lots of practice.
Recent developments in treating pre-cancers
have produced something called the Blue-U treatment. I had forearms and scalp
done last year, and on June 6th, they blasted the forearms again
with a stronger approach.
It's an interesting treatment. They
"paint" the affected area with a special acid then send you away for
three to four hours. My latest was four hours. Then I sat with my arms in the
"light housing" for an exact amount of time—sixteen minutes and 40
seconds. This produces the equivalent of a bad sunburn. The doctor has explained
how the approach targets the pre-cancerous cells and zaps them, but all I feel
is the burn.
Hopefully, this treatment will be my
last for a while. However, I have little expectation it will end my visits to
my dermatologist. I'm sure I'll see her armed with her liquid nitrogen and double-edged
razor blade many more times—at least every six months.
I remember all those glorious tans and
ask myself it they were worth it. Sun, sweat, swimming pools, beaches, gardening,
convertibles with the top down . . . It was all fun. Would I do it again?
Something to ponder.
5 comments:
Hi Randy,
We really didn't know better. And then the damage was done. Not like people who smoked young, and then quit when they learned of the danger. Their lungs start clearing up immediately and make great improvement in the course of a few years. No such luck with sun damage. It lurks beneath the top layer, waiting.
Melanoma is not treated with freezing and slicing. It's done with cutting, biopsy, more cutting, another biopsy, more, and more, and then many many sutures to close the baseball sized hole. And then, you go back for more.
I was a sun worshiper when I was young and into adulthood too and my skin has suffered from it.
Randy, I think we all have something from way back when and wish we had known better. For me, it was smoking. For both of us, I can only say it coulda been worse.
I hope your new dermatologist is cute.
Randy, the question on my mind is, then why did you move to the sunshine state?
Guess that gives you reason to stay inside near the cute doctors.
Enjoyed the tale!
Sylvia
In those days, I don't think any of us heard anything about skin cancer. I used to lay in the sun for hours.
Now, I can't handle it for long, and seek air conditioning instead.
Morgan Mandel
http://morganmandel.blogspot.com
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