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Charles Bronson
10-19-2016, 10:03 PM
I have cancer, my niggaz.

TBH skin-cancer. A MENA has skin-cancer how hilarious.:bowlol:

LP0956
10-19-2016, 10:05 PM
Me too
I am the cancer

Charles Bronson
10-19-2016, 10:07 PM
Me too
I am the cancer



Skin-cancer is not curable.

LP0956
10-19-2016, 10:08 PM
Skin-cancer is not curable.

I wish I had cancer so that I would no longer be alive

Hadouken
10-19-2016, 10:10 PM
notsureifsrs

Charles Bronson
10-19-2016, 10:10 PM
I wish I had cancer so that I would no longer be alive



I do not troll you moron, as like you. But sure some dies sooner or later and I die sooner.

Charles Bronson
10-19-2016, 10:13 PM
notsureifsrs

Yes.

Hadouken
10-19-2016, 10:13 PM
I am very sorry man . dont know what to say

Charles Bronson
10-19-2016, 10:14 PM
I am very sorry man . dont know what to say

Nothing special, million peoples has cancer, every must be die.

LP0956
10-19-2016, 10:15 PM
I do not troll you moron, as like you. But sure some dies sooner or later and I die sooner.

If you're not trolling and like living then I wish you get well and can have a normal life, but I'm being serious by saying I really wanna get cancer so that I can die

Charles Bronson
10-19-2016, 10:17 PM
If you're not trolling and like living then I wish you get well and can have a normal life, but I'm being serious by saying I really wanna get cancer so that I can die



Are you dumb?

frankhammer
10-19-2016, 10:18 PM
Yes.Melanoma?

Charles Bronson
10-19-2016, 10:19 PM
Melanoma?


Yes, a black one.

Dr. Robotnik the Subbotnik
10-19-2016, 10:20 PM
Me too
I am the cancer

You got that right.

frankhammer
10-19-2016, 10:21 PM
Yes, a black one.

So it has been removed for a biopsy and confirmed by a specialist?

Myanthropologies
10-19-2016, 10:22 PM
Why are you surprised? You're not that dark. Also be thankful that your cancer is something you can laugh about and easily get rid of, not something that limits your time on the earth. Be careful, take care of yourself, and I hope you get better.

LP0956
10-19-2016, 10:22 PM
Are you dumb?

A bit.

Charles Bronson
10-19-2016, 10:23 PM
So it has been removed for a biopsy and confirmed by a specialist?



Yes, at the beginning it scraped and later came blood.

frankhammer
10-19-2016, 10:28 PM
There's always a chance you can beat it. Let's hope you can.

Charles Bronson
10-19-2016, 10:29 PM
Why are you surprised? You're not that dark. Also be thankful that your cancer is something you can laugh about and easily get rid of, not something that limits your time on the earth. Be careful, take care of yourself, and I hope you get better.



I know it was cancer, I just needed the confirmation from the doctor. I was not shocked or so I make a ironically joke.


There's always a chance you can beat it. Let's hope you can.



Skin-cancer is not curable, I take Vitamin D3 and K2 because the less Sunbeams.

Dr. Robotnik the Subbotnik
10-19-2016, 10:35 PM
RIP

you were my Turanic bro ;(

frankhammer
10-19-2016, 10:36 PM
Skin-cancer is not curable, I take Vitamin D3 and K2 because the less Sunbeams.

Melanoma survival rates aren't high but there are survivors. Has it moved past the lymph nodes? Have the specialists offered surgery?

Wadaad
10-19-2016, 10:37 PM
My thoughts are with you...

Wadaad
10-19-2016, 10:39 PM
If you're not trolling and like living then I wish you get well and can have a normal life, but I'm being serious by saying I really wanna get cancer so that I can die

Just run infront of a subway train...make it look accidental so your family can grieve properly.

Charles Bronson
10-19-2016, 10:40 PM
Melanoma survival rates aren't high but there are survivors. Has it moved past the lymph nodes? Have the specialists offered surgery?

No.





RIP

you were my Turanic bro ;(

LMAO.

frankhammer
10-19-2016, 11:09 PM
No.





So there is a chance. When do you have lymph node biopsy surgery scheduled?

Charles Bronson
10-19-2016, 11:13 PM
They give me an appointment.

de Burgh II
10-19-2016, 11:32 PM
You have my condolences!

Get well soon! :)

Charles Bronson
11-07-2016, 12:46 PM
I start today with my "Heal-Fast".:cool:

Milo
11-07-2016, 12:52 PM
Get well soon :)

I can't believe some people's comments here.

Queen B
11-07-2016, 12:55 PM
Its one of the cases when you really wish this is trolling and not serious......

11-07-2016, 12:55 PM
i just saw this thread.. youll get over it easily! get very well soon

Charles Bronson
11-07-2016, 12:56 PM
Get well soon :)

I can't believe some people's comments here.



The life is to short, do not make so many thoughts.

♥ Lily ♥
11-07-2016, 01:03 PM
Skin cancer isn't just something that kills loads of white people each year;- it's also prevalant in darker skin types too, even if they have more melatonin to protect them, so they should also wear broad-spectrum and high UV protective clothing, hats, shades, parasols, and lotions whilst walking in sunlight too - not just to prevent getting any wrinkles later in life (95% of all wrinkles (sun-damaged skin with a leathery texture - like the skin on prunes that have been exposed to the sun) are the result of UVA damage to the skin's collagen structure, according to dermatologists,) but broad-spectrum protection should be used to prevent skin cancer too from the UVB rays, and not just to prevent wrinkles (aka 'sun-damaged skin'.)

Early detection can save lives, although prevention is always better than cure. Some skin cancer victims have large chunks of their skin cut out leaving large scars and are given strong medications with side-effects to help try to destroy the cancer and save their lives before the cancer spreads all over their skin and organs.

I only need 2 minutes of sunlight on my skin each day to get enough vitamin D, but for people with darker skin, they need more exposure to absorb vitamin D. I also eat fish each day (rich in vitamin D) and take vitamin supplements. White people aren't suited to living in hot climates and haven't adapted the skin type protection required to live in such hot environments.

I've never had skin cancer as I use factor 100 sunblocks like a religion all year round if I have to walk in the daylight, and I use high protection on my lips, hair, ears, eyes, nails, along with strong protection parasols and plenty of shade during the summer months, to keep my skin super-soft, smooth, and youthful, as I don't want wrinkles later in life, but here are some people who've survived from skin cancer;-


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OcOh7WnyPYY

It's sad about the amount of teenagers who die each year in Australia and Florida from skin cancer though, despite all the health and beauty warnings about protecting your skin from both UVA and UVB rays every day by leading dermatologists, in top beauty magazines, on skincare products, and in hair salons and in medical centres too.

A tan is a sign of unhealthy, damaged, and cooked skin, that becomes leathery in texture and will get wrinkled prematurely. If this isn't peoples natural shade, then they're killing themselves prematurely by frying their skin like wrinkled prunes in the sun.

These foolish prats know the dangers of walking in the sun without wearing strong protection, let alone dressing like prostitutes dressed only in their underwear when walking around in public on beaches, and sun-bathing in the dangerous rays. They carelessly fry their skin and don't care about looking after their skin beauty and skin health.

Health warnings are strewn around GP surgeries like confetti.... so they're asking for premature wrinkles and skin cancer. It's difficult to sympathise for idiots who deliberately fry their skin, despite all the health and beauty warnings.

8000 people are given the bad news they have skin cancer in Australia each year, and 1000 of the people diagnosed with skin cancer in Australia every year die prematurely, including teenagers and people in their twenties.

This news report was made due to the amount of premature deaths from skin cancer in Australia each year, which has been described by experts as a 'national health crisis'.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dQSJNbiH480

After getting teased in the media so much for having white skin, to the point she broke-down crying and asked the media to stop picking on her over her skin, Nicola Roberts has since launched her own 'Dainty Doll' make-up products to suit and complement girls with fair complexions. She's also been successful in her campaign to get the UK government to ban dangerous sun-beds in salons. Pale skin is healthy, elegant, and soft, unlike unhealthy and damaged tanned skin.

Cosmetic companies thrive on making people feel insecure so they'll buy their products - so that's why fake tans and dangerous tanning beds are advertised in the west, while skin bleaching products are advertised in nations where females have naturally dark skin. The companies make people feel insecure with their natural skin tone whilst advertising their 'solution products' as a guide to finding happiness and love and success in life in their skin-bleaching commercials. It's all a marketing con to make profits from making people feel insecure, so they'll buy the dangerous products.

Japanese females look after their skin and use sun-parasols when walking in the sunlight, as pale skin is associated with youth in their culture too (as the skin can get dull and darken with age due to the functioning of the liver which needs to be kept flushed with water each day for bright and light skin.)

A female in a department store once rudely tried to give me a free sample of fake tan and I instantly gave it back to her and politely and quietly said I don't need it. She looked a bit stunned, but I've learned to be comfortable and content with my natural skintone. My sister is also against fake tan products too and is comfortable being pale too, even though she was teased by bitchy females wearing fake tans.

During the Victorian and Tudor eras, pale skin was seen as a symbol of high status and prestige in society, and so many paintings of Queen Elizabeth I, etc, and those of high nobility are shown with having fair skin that was even powdered to make it look even lighter. This view during those eras of time was due to the wealthy upper classes sipping peppermint tea in the shade during summer days, and using elegant fans and sun parasols, and the poorer people doing long hours of labour in the hot sun, so the Victorian and Tudor societies of people viewed and associated a tan as 'dirty skin' and a sign of poverty, according to historians and sociologists.

Victorian lace sun-parasol and elbow-length silky gloves to protect the hands from the sun. (Pale goths in the gothic subculture of society also love wearing this elegant Victorian-era clothing too.)
http://thumbs1.ebaystatic.com/d/l225/m/mxoRswjQRPUXGJAwKqlU7_g.jpg
https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/564x/81/b3/8e/81b38e774bb13ef273f538e09d908cdb.jpghttp://dresden.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/219_Bradford-A-Flirtattous-Glance.jpg
http://image.timepassagesnostalgia.com/watermarked/images65/6592occjapx4a.jpg
https://www.seawaychina.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/FIG-Lady-Anna-Louise-HN4966-2007POY.jpg

Tudor Queen Elizabeth I (a fair-skinned redhead)
http://www.dltk-kids.com/puzzles/jigsaw/2013/puzzle-images/1221.jpg

Anyway, if people now rudely say to me that I look too pale, I sometimes feel like saying back to them that they look too dark. Oh, people wouldn't like their own rude treatment back at them. Same way when fat people have told me in the past that I was too thin, (nope, slim is not thin, and I've noticed that other slim people never once said that to me;- only overweight and fat people have said it to me,) and I feel like saying back to them that they're too fat. :)

Nicola is also promoting fair skin as beautiful and elegant and interesting, so females don't have to feel ashamed of being white and pressurised into wearing fake tan in order to look brown.

http://www.theplace2.ru/archive/nicola_roberts/img/Nicola_Roberts_Wallp.jpg
http://www.theplace2.ru/archive/nicola_roberts/img/015821_nicola_robert.jpg


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fds3X13RyzY


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vPd58eu_FZk


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dVUpaZh-aF8

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C9n8EMF_3FI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wEG7BglBuYg

A tanorexic (someone who's addicted to tanning) woman was criminally-charged in the US for irresponsibly taking her five year old daughter into a dangerous tanning booth with her. I think her leathery skin texture looks awful. She's got a mental addiction problem though that stems from an insecurity in her mind about her natural skin tone, courtesy of the western advertising cult of sunbeds and fake tans.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vFo7XcMMZSk

Charles Bronson
11-07-2016, 01:13 PM
[I][FONT=Georgia]Skin cancer isn't just something that kills loads of white people each year;- it's also prevalant in darker skin types too, even if they have more melatonin to protect them, so they should also wear broad-spectrum and high UV protective clothing, hats, shades, parasols, and lotions whilst walking in sunlight too - not just to prevent getting any wrinkles later in life (95% of wrinkles (sun-damaged skin) are the result of UVA damage to the skin's collagen structure,) but broad-spectrum protection should be used to prevent skin cancer too from the UVB rays.



I never give up, but it was my failure as a teenager, I go in the public swimming house without sun blocker.

Light
11-07-2016, 01:20 PM
Well what can I say?

Life is meaningless, nothing really matters and we are all slowly dying actually.

I hope it helps. #motivational

Charles Bronson
11-07-2016, 01:27 PM
Well what can I say?

Life is meaningless, nothing really matters and we are all slowly dying actually.

I hope it helps. #motivational

Yes after my diagnosis, I thought a lot of the life, but it is simply: only the strongest survive, and the humans with the weakest DNA are dying it is a natural selection.

Light
11-07-2016, 01:39 PM
Yes after my diagnosis, I thought a lot of the life, but it is simply: only the strongest survive, and the humans with the weakest DNA are dying it is a natural selection.

If you got cancer it doesn't necesarly mean you have weak genes. It's just that you were unlucky and some factors provided the situation for you to have this sickness.

I'm not sure but I heard it is very easy to treat skin cancer. Of course it depende on the stage of the sickness.

But anyway, I don't think you really have cancer.. you're trolling right?

crazyladybutterfly
11-07-2016, 01:43 PM
I do not troll you moron, as like you. But sure some dies sooner or later and I die sooner.

is it really of an advanced stage that probably compromised internal organs or are you just afraid? skin cancer has a very high number of survivors . it isnt like pancreatic cancer

crazyladybutterfly
11-07-2016, 01:44 PM
If you're not trolling and like living then I wish you get well and can have a normal life, but I'm being serious by saying I really wanna get cancer so that I can die

out of all od deaths you want to die of cancer? lol

Annie999
11-07-2016, 01:51 PM
Why do you say skin cancer has no cure? It does, in fact the ratio of survival is very high (98% when it doesn't reach the lymph nodes, and you say your didn't).

Light
11-07-2016, 01:54 PM
Why do you say skin cancer has no cure? It does, in fact the ratio of survival is very high (98% when it doesn't reach the lymph nodes, and you say your didn't).

That's why I say he's trolling. : ))

Annie999
11-07-2016, 01:58 PM
That's why I say he's trolling. : ))

Yeah that's what I thought too. Though I find it hard to believe someone would troll over such a serious matter, besides how disrespectful that'd be to the many users that had/have family members going through that ugly disease.

crazyladybutterfly
11-07-2016, 02:16 PM
http://www.cancer.org/cancer/skincancer-melanoma/detailedguide/melanoma-skin-cancer-survival-rates-by-stage

What is a 5-year or 10-year survival rate?
a 5-year survival rate of 70% means that an estimated 70 out of 100 people who have that cancer are still alive 5 years after being diagnosed. Keep in mind, however, that many of these people live much longer than 5 years after diagnosis.

But remember, survival rates are estimates – your outlook can vary based on a number of factors specific to you.

There are a number of limitations to remember:

The numbers below are among the most current available. But to get 5-year or 10-year survival rates, doctors have to look at people who were treated at least 5 or 10 years ago. As treatments are improving over time, people who are now being diagnosed with melanoma may have a better outlook than these statistics show.
These statistics are based on the stage of the cancer when it was first diagnosed. They do not apply to cancers that later come back or spread, for example.
The outlook for people with melanoma varies by the stage (extent) of the cancer – in general, the survival rates are higher for people with earlier stage cancers. But many other factors can affect a person’s outlook, such as age and overall health, and how well the cancer responds to treatment. The outlook for each person is specific to their circumstances.


Survival rates for melanoma

The following survival rates are based on nearly 60,000 patients who were part of the 2008 AJCC Melanoma Staging Database. These survival rates include some people diagnosed with melanoma who may have died later from other causes, such as heart disease. Therefore, the percentage of people surviving the melanoma itself may be higher.

Stage IA: The 5-year survival rate is around 97%. The 10-year survival is around 95%.

Stage IB: The 5-year survival rate is around 92%. The 10-year survival is around 86%.

Stage IIA: The 5-year survival rate is around 81%. The 10-year survival is around 67%.

Stage IIB: The 5-year survival rate is around 70%. The 10-year survival is around 57%.

Stage IIC: The 5-year survival rate is around 53%. The 10-year survival is around 40%.

Stage IIIA: The 5-year survival rate is around 78%. The 10-year survival is around 68%.*

Stage IIIB: The 5-year survival rate is around 59%. The 10-year survival is around 43%.

Stage IIIC: The 5-year survival rate is around 40%. The 10-year survival is around 24%.

Stage IV: The 5-year survival rate is about 15% to 20%. The 10-year survival is about 10% to 15%. The outlook is better if the spread is only to distant parts of the skin or distant lymph nodes rather than to other organs, and if the blood level of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) is normal.

crazyladybutterfly
11-07-2016, 02:41 PM
http://www.skincancer.org/skin-cancer-information/melanoma/the-stages-of-melanoma/guide-to-staging-melanoma

New Melanoma Staging System – By means of an unprecedented cooperative effort among cancer centers around the world, the classification system recommended by the American Joint Commission on Cancer (AJCC) has been updated as of 2010. New findings about melanoma are incorporated to provide the most accurate diagnosis and prognosis (a forecast of how the disease is likely to progress).


The most important factors in the new staging system are :
-the thickness of the tumor, known as Breslow’s thickness
Breslow’s thickness measures in millimeters the distance between the upper layer of the epidermis and the deepest point of tumor penetration. The thinner the melanoma, the better the chance of a cure. Therefore, Breslow’s thickness is considered one of the most significant factors in predicting the progression of the disease.

-In situ (non-invasive) melanoma remains confined to the epidermis.

• Thin tumors are less than 1.0 millimeter (mm) in Breslow’s depth.

• Intermediate tumors are 1.0-4.0 mm.

• Thick melanomas are greater than 4.0 mm.


-the appearance of microscopic ulceration (meaning that the epidermis on top of a major portion of the melanoma is not intact),
The presence of microscopic ulceration upgrades a tumor’s seriousness and can move it into a later stage. Therefore, the physician may consider using a more aggressive treatment than would otherwise be selected.

- and mitotic rate, the speed of cell division (how fast-growing the cancer cells are).
Mitotic rate has been introduced into the staging system based on recent evidence that it is also an independent factor predicting prognosis. The presence of at least one mitosis (cancer cell division) per millimeter squared (mm2) can upgrade a thin melanoma to a later stage at higher risk for metastasis.

categories (for Tumor)

EARLY MELANOMAS . STAGE I AND II
• Stage Tis. The tumor is in situ and remains non-invasive in the epidermis.
• Stage T1a. The tumor is invasive but less than or equal to 1.0 mm in Breslow’s thickness, without ulceration and with a mitotic rate of less than 1/mm2.
• Stage T1b. The tumor is less than or equal to 1 mm thick. It is ulcerated and/or the mitotic rate is equal to or greater than 1/mm2.
• Stage T2a. The tumor is 1.01-2.0 mm thick without ulceration.
• Stage T2b. The tumor is 1.01-2.0 mm thick with ulceration.
• Stage T3a. The melanoma is 2.01-4.0 mm thick without ulceration.
• Stage T3b. The melanoma is 2.01-4.0 mm thick with ulceration.
• Stage T4a. The tumor is thicker than than 4.0 mm without ulceration
• Stage T4b. The tumor is thicker than 4.0 mm with ulceration.



Stage III. By the time a melanoma advances to Stage III or beyond, an important change has occurred. The Breslow’s thickness is by then irrelevant and is no longer included in staging, but the presence of microscopic ulceration continues to be used, as it has an important effect on the progression of the disease. At this point, the tumor has either spread to the lymph nodes or to the skin between the primary tumor and the nearby lymph nodes.
A tumor is assigned to Stage III if it has metastasized or spread beyond the original tumor site. This can be determined by examining a biopsy of the node nearest the tumor, known as the sentinel node. Such a biopsy is now frequently done when a tumor is more than 1 mm in thickness, or when a thinner melanoma shows evidence of ulceration.
In-transit or satellite metastases are also included in Stage III. In this case, the spread is to skin or underlying (subcutaneous) tissue for a distance of more than 2 centimeters (1 cm equals 0.4 inch) from the primary tumor, but not to the regional lymph nodes.
In addition, the new staging system includes metastases so tiny they can be seen only through the microscope (micrometastases). Just how advanced the tumor is into Stage III (the “N” category, for “nodes”) depends on factors such as whether the metastases are in-transit or have reached the nodes, the number of metastatic nodes, the number of cancer cells found in them, and whether or not they are micrometastases or can be seen with the naked eye.


Stage IV. The melanoma has metastasized to lymph nodes distant from the primary tumor or to internal organs, most often the lung, followed in descending order of frequency by the liver, brain, bone, and gastrointestinal tract. The two main factors in determining how advanced the melanoma is into Stage IV (the “M” category, for “metastases”) are the site of the distant metastases (nonvisceral, lung, or any other visceral metastatic sites) and elevated serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) level.

crazyladybutterfly
11-07-2016, 02:42 PM
Melanoma of the Skin Staging
https://cancerstaging.org/references-tools/quickreferences/documents/melanomasmall.pdf

crazyladybutterfly
11-07-2016, 02:53 PM
There are two forms of skin cancer: melanoma and nonmelanoma.

Melanoma is a rare form of skin cancer. It is more likely to invade nearby tissues and spread to other parts of the body than other types of skin cancer. When melanoma starts in the skin, it is called cutaneous melanoma. Melanoma may also occur in mucous membranes (thin, moist layers of tissue that cover surfaces such as the lips).

The most common types of skin cancer are basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma. They are nonmelanoma skin cancers. Nonmelanoma skin cancers rarely spread to other parts of the body.
When melanoma occurs in the eye, it is called intraocular or ocular melanoma.
https://www.cancer.gov/types/skin/patient/melanoma-treatment-pdq

crazyladybutterfly
11-07-2016, 02:56 PM
Genetics of Skin Cancer

he genetics of skin cancer is an extremely broad topic. There are more than 100 types of tumors that are clinically apparent on the skin; many of these are known to have familial components, either in isolation or as part of a syndrome with other features. This is, in part, because the skin itself is a complex organ made up of multiple cell types. Furthermore, many of these cell types can undergo malignant transformation at various points in their differentiation, leading to tumors with distinct histology and dramatically different biological behaviors, such as squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) and basal cell cancer (BCC). These have been called nonmelanoma skin cancers or keratinocyte cancers

Once the cancer crosses the basement membrane into the dermis, it is invasive. Internal malignancies also commonly metastasize to the skin. The dermis and subcutis are the most common locations, but the epidermis can also be involved in conditions such as Pagetoid breast cancer.

https://www.cancer.gov/types/skin/hp/skin-genetics-pdq

crazyladybutterfly
11-07-2016, 02:57 PM
BRAF gene : A gene that makes a protein called B-RAF, which is involved in sending signals in cells and in cell growth. This gene may be mutated (changed) in many types of cancer, which causes a change in the B-RAF protein. This can increase the growth and spread of cancer cells.

♥ Lily ♥
11-07-2016, 03:00 PM
I never give up, but it was my failure as a teenager, I go in the public swimming house without sun blocker.

I'm really sorry and sad to hear that you have cancer... but don't be too harsh on yourself as most people are naive in life as teenagers. (Myself included;- I burned my shoulders once when I was ten after playing in our family gardens for only 20-30 minutes without sun protection here in southern England. I developed painful sunburn and massive painful blisters on top of my shoulders and I had to wear bandages for two weeks. It was so painful. I've never let myself burn again though. )

If was you, I'd just listen to the dermatologists, skin experts and doctors who are medically treating you fo your condition.

I don't know whether your cancer has spread or not, or whether doctors have it under control, but I guess taking whatever medications are prescribed to you by doctors, along with probiotics or natural bio-yoghurt, drinking green tea, and eating health foods will at least help to keep your immunity strong. (There's nothing to lose in looking after your diet and health and providing your bloodstream and organs with vital nutrients needed to survive each day.)

Also I think it would be wise to avoid walking around in strong sunlight - unless you're wearing UV protective sun hats and UV protective sun clothing, and wearing high SPF sunblock protection lotion with a broad spectrum against a range of different sunrays (applied frequently.)

Avoiding being outside in the midday sun helps (when the sun is at its strongest between the hours of 11am-3pm,) and taking cool shade from strong sunlight will help to protect your skin.

Drinking lots of filtered water and keeping cool will help to prevent dehydration/sunstroke/heatstroke/fainting in strong heat.

Using SPF-graded protective sun parasols while walking outside in the sun and wearing protective UV-tested sunglasses to protect your vision and eye health, and high SPF lip balm to protect the delicate skin on your lips, etc, all helps in keeping your skin protected.

Beauty experts and dermatologists warn that UVA and UVB rays bounces-off reflective surfaces (such as from pavements and mirrors and windows and buildings) and onto the skin, so wearing protection each day - even when indoors, is essential.

Experts always recommend wearing UV protection all year round - even on cloudy days as UVA is still present in the daylight.

A lot of people don't apply their sunblock lotions correctly according to dermatologists - by using too little and by not applying it every few hours.

There's also sunblock curtains for windows that can block strong sunrays out, which are also tested in their abilities to blackout lights at night, drown-out noise, and also keep warmth inside during the winter season.

I'm heliophobic so all of the above is like a religion to me in skincare.

This gothic guy below explains how to correctly apply sunblock lotion - and the amount of lotion needed to properly protect the skin.

He recommends a teaspoon of sunblock lotion for every part of your body. I use a lot more than a teaspoon of lotion on my arms, etc, though, and so I tend to get through bottles of sunblock quite quickly.

I use Neutrogena SPF level 110 UVA and UVB skin protection (some experts say anything over factor 50 isn't required,) which I apply to my skin after applying my Neutrogena SPF 15 or SPF25 daily-defence moisturiser first, as well as a high SPF50 lip protection by Uvistat, factor 30 hair and scalp spray protection (that's the highest I've managed to find,) SPF50 eye gel (that's the highest SPF level I've managed to find in eye gels so far. Don't ever try to put even a tiny amount of sun protection lotion in the skin around your eyes or it really makes your eyes sting and makes your eyes water like hell;- you'll need special lightweight SPF gels that are designed for the delicate skin around the eyes to protect them from wrinkles caused by sun exposure,) and SPF approved sunglasses with no metal rims on them that can burn the skin, and I carry a factor 50 protective sun parasol umbrella over my head that's made from special sun-resistant material when walking outside during the summer months.

I can send you the links of the products I use to protect my skin when walking outside in the sunlight during the different seasons. (I've got pale skin that burns easily and yet I've managed to successfully protect my skin from the sun since being a teenager.)

During the Autumn and Spring I reduce my SPF to factor 50 level of protection from the sun-rays ... sometimes even going as low as factor 25 or even level 15 (which is the minimum daily level of sun protection recommended each day by dermatologists) if the sun isn't too bright.

Also it's really important to apply the sunblocks at least 20 minutes before walking in the sunlight - so it absorbs properly into your skin layers before being exposed to the burning fire-ball sun.

I never travel to hot countries that has strong sunlight. I won't ever foolishly sunbathe like a masochist. I don't wish to go in the sea either, (as the sea dries out the skin and dries out the hair and it washes off sunblock protection.)

Also don't forget to protect the back of the neck and backs of the ears too;- I saw a news article once about a female in England who got skin cancer on the back of her ears, (even though she wore sunblock, she forgot to apply it to the delicate skin on the back of her ears,) and she was sitting in her garden reading and the sun burned the back of her ears, before developing into skin cancer. Luckily she noticed it and caught it in time to have it treated so it didn't spread to the rest of her body.

When I'm indoors I just use Neutrogena Multi-Defence Daily Moisturiser with SPF15 UVA/UVB protection - or the same product in SPF25 sometimes instead, (or Clinique daily SPF UVA/UVB protection moisturiser is also good too,) although I don't bother with very high levels of protection when it's winter here (we live at a low altitude from the sun and it's often cloudy - so factor 15 is enough to protect my skin from the UVA rays during the winter season,) and if the sun shines brightly into my south-facing living room I pull the curtains over to block out the midday sun.

You need UVA protection all year round, even on cloudy days, according to dermatologists and beauty experts (UVA are the rays that causes skin wrinkles and ageing,) and both UVB and UVA protection is required during the late Spring and Summer seasons, (UVB rays are stronger and present more during the summer - and these are the sun rays that causes skin cancer.) There's a star rating on sun protection lotions to show the amount of UVA to UVB protection.

I apply sunblock all over my skin during very hot days and try to avoid walking in the midday sun, but in the cooler seasons, I don't need to apply it all over me and only use protection on my face, eyes, lips, neck and hands (as I have more clothing on when it's cold to protect my body anyway during the seasons when the sunlight is less strong.)

In places with a high altitude that are closer to the sun, such as in the ski-slopes of the Alps, high sun protection is required as skiers often get sunburn.... and also in the cold Antartica continent where I saw an article about explorers there who suffered from very nasty sunburns that was shown in photos - even though they were wearing extremely high levels of sun protection products, and after they only had 20 minutes exposure to the sun before getting serious sunburns in that region of the planet.

So that's another thing to take into consideration is the region of the planet you live in, the varying seasons, the amount of exposure you have in the sun, and the places you travel to visit, in deciding what levels of sun protection you'll need to protect your skin.

All skin types (including darker skins too) need some level of protection from the sun rays according to dermatologists, although people with pale skin, freckled skin, or skin that burns easily in the sun require the highest levels of sun protection.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9i0pEo1BPE0

Charles Bronson
11-07-2016, 03:08 PM
If you got cancer it doesn't necesarly mean you have weak genes. It's just that you were unlucky and some factors provided the situation for you to have this sickness.

I'm not sure but I heard it is very easy to treat skin cancer. Of course it depende on the stage of the sickness.

But anyway, I don't think you really have cancer.. you're trolling right?



No, I troll not.

Dick
11-07-2016, 03:10 PM
SORRY TO HEAR THAT BRO

Charles Bronson
11-07-2016, 03:12 PM
Yeah that's what I thought too. Though I find it hard to believe someone would troll over such a serious matter, besides how disrespectful that'd be to the many users that had/have family members going through that ugly disease.


Don't talk too much, why do you think I lie about this serious case.

Charles Bronson
11-07-2016, 03:40 PM
That's why I say he's trolling. : ))


This is the second melanoma, it will be surgically removed this week. Its on my left belly.

http://www2.pic-upload.de/thumb/32072944/77.jpg (http://www.pic-upload.de/view-32072944/77.jpg.html)

http://www2.pic-upload.de/thumb/32072947/2222.jpg (http://www.pic-upload.de/view-32072947/2222.jpg.html)

Poise n Pen
11-07-2016, 04:19 PM
GOOD LUCK WITH YOUR CANCER. MY DOC THOUGHT I HAD SKIN CANCER BUT IT TURNED OUT TO BE SOME OTHER BULLSHIT THAT WENT AWAY WITH A CREAM BUT FIRST SHE CUT OFF A BUNCH OF SKIN JUST IN CASE!!!

THEN THE NEXT TIME I SAW HERE SHE WAS LIKE. OH CANCER? NO IT IS NOT CANCER. OH. OK THEN. WHY DO YOU MAKE ME COME BACK THEN? FCUKING DOCTORD MAN.

Light
11-07-2016, 04:24 PM
This is the second melanoma, it will be surgically removed this week. Its on my left belly.

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[URL=http://www.pic-uplhttp://www2.pic-upload.de/thumb/32072947/2222.jpg[/IMG] (http://www.pic-uploadw2.pic-upload.de/thumb/32072944/77.jpg[/IMG)

Damn dude! I really thought that you were trolling.

Man up bro! You can beat that shit! It seems to be small dots. How's that incurable?

Kriptc06
11-07-2016, 04:27 PM
I wish you well my brother,

Charles Bronson
11-07-2016, 04:31 PM
Man up bro! You can beat that shit! It seems to be small dots. How's that incurable?


It's 0.6mm width, when I have a high stress level, then it itches.

LP0956
11-07-2016, 08:03 PM
out of all od deaths you want to die of cancer? lol

I wish I had any of them.

spectacular
11-07-2016, 08:30 PM
dostum gecmis olsun.
Hope to get well as soon as possible .

Itarildë
11-07-2016, 08:41 PM
Skin cancer is curable by the way. Although, it does depend on how long you have had it and if it has spread. My father has had it twice and he's still going strong!

magyar_lány
11-07-2016, 08:45 PM
I hope you get well soon.

Pahli
11-07-2016, 08:46 PM
Get well soon Harlekin! :cool:

Annie999
11-07-2016, 11:43 PM
Don't talk too much, why do you think I lie about this serious case.

Because you said there is no cure for skin cancer when there is. But I believe you and hope you get well soon.

Kazimiera
11-08-2016, 12:09 AM
I'm so sorry. PLEASE keep an eye on it. My husband died of skin cancer in 2008.

He was a blue-eyed, blonde-haired surfer who was in the sun 24/7. He got a melanoma in the back of his neck in 1998, which was removed. He never went for a check-up again. Stupid man. When he eventually got sick it was too late. The cancer had spread to kidneys, liver, colon, lungs and brain. He lived a month from the time he was diagnosed.

Please, PLEASE look after yourself. There are too many people who die unnecessary deaths because they don't keep an eye on it.

Mortimer
11-08-2016, 12:13 AM
Im very sorry bro, I wish you will survive by any chance but if not prepare for the next world and I will include you in my prayers, time to prepare for the next world. Visit the priest of whatever religion you have talk to him, go to your house of worship. Make your own thoughts etc., enjoy your time with your family and friends you have left

Kazimiera
11-08-2016, 12:15 AM
Im very sorry bro, I wish you will survive by any chance but if not prepare for the next world and I will include you in my prayers, time to prepare for the next world. Visit the priest of whatever religion you have talk to him, go to your house of worship. Make your own thoughts etc., enjoy your time with your family and friends you have left

Good Lord! The man isn't dead yet! You're treating him like he is on death's bed! :D

Mortimer
11-08-2016, 12:17 AM
Good Lord! The man isn't dead yet! You're treating him like he is on death's bed! :D

He said there is no cure though.I said I hope he will survive by any chance. I wish him well and that he survives.

Kazimiera
11-08-2016, 12:19 AM
He said there is no cure though.I said I hope he will survive by any chance. I wish him well and that he survives.

If they scoop the melanoma out with a wide excision they can get it out intact. It becomes a problem when if and when the excision isn't wide enough and the melanoma is very deep and it gets into the lymph nodes. I'm sure he got it seen to soon.

Light
11-08-2016, 06:37 AM
Annie999 should be hogtied and beheaded for her disrespectful ass comments.

The only "bad" treatment that Annie should receive. ;)

https://media.giphy.com/media/mp33m3fvnDrsQ/giphy.gif

Poise n Pen
11-08-2016, 07:07 AM
I'm so sorry. PLEASE keep an eye on it. My husband died of skin cancer in 2008.

He was a blue-eyed, blonde-haired surfer who was in the sun 24/7. He got a melanoma in the back of his neck in 1998, which was removed. He never went for a check-up again. Stupid man. When he eventually got sick it was too late. The cancer had spread to kidneys, liver, colon, lungs and brain. He lived a month from the time he was diagnosed.

Please, PLEASE look after yourself. There are too many people who die unnecessary deaths because they don't keep an eye on it.

With skin cancer if they don't get it right away you almost always die, so lookups may not have done much to help him anyway though it's always best to get a doctor looking at things as often as possible.

Paris-Brest
11-08-2016, 10:24 AM
Don't give up the fight you can cure your illness. Listen to your doctors (maybe you could see different doctors), try to eat healthy, have fun with the people you like, do the things you enjoy. I know it's difficult but try to be positive. My father also has cancer but he is still active. I hope you get better soon.

War Chef
11-08-2016, 01:29 PM
This is the second melanoma, it will be surgically removed this week. Its on my left belly.

http://www2.pic-upload.de/thumb/32072944/77.jpg (http://www.pic-upload.de/view-32072944/77.jpg.html)



That doesn't look like Melanoma or skin cancer. It looks like a regular mole. It doesn't have irregular borders & lacks asymmetry. I'm not a doctor but we studied Melanoma & others types of skin cancer.

I remember you said you take Benzo's. Those can cause lots of anxiety especially hypochondria.

Still follow through with getting it checked out, but take it easy, I'm 90% you don't have skin cancer.

Ryujin
12-01-2016, 09:17 PM
Are you serious? no trolling or anything?

PM me if you're joking, I won't tell anyone, you're my friend, don't troll me about it.

Sekkmer
12-05-2016, 02:30 PM
Continue the fight, don't give up!