I hold my hand up, I am that melanoma patient that sun bathed excessively. During my mid to late teens on that very rare occassion that we had a sunny day, or heaven forbid a whole sunny summer during the school holidays, I would think nothing of spending the whole day at the outdoor baths or lying in the garden. Sometimes I used sun tan oil, sometimes I didn't. Sometimes I burned, most often I didn't.
Even earlier, I came from a time when kids went out to play as soon as they got up and came home when it went dark, rain or shine. We wore shorts, t-shirts and sandals in the summer and SPF hadn't been invented.
Further back still, we still have some jittery old colour cine film that shows me on holiday in the South of France, age 2 and a half, filling my drawers with stones on the beach and I'm definitely sporting a tan.
Fast forward til I'm 19 and my first holiday abroad since that time (too many siblings came along in the interim to make continental holidays a way of life). I spent an absolute fortune on sun products, including a special high protection cream for my face... it was SPF 7. And yes, I burned. I spent one night lying in a bath of cold water, and let me tell you that never happened again!
And for a few years, a week or a fortnight a year in France or Spain, even Turkey one year became the norm. But after the bath incident I was a lot more careful, built it up steadily, stayed out of the midday sun etc etc.
I will even hold my hand up to using a sunbed. Not a great deal, I was never tangoed like the young girls you see today, but I would have a couple of sessions before going on holiday, just to "prepare" my skin. I even had a couple before my wedding, just to have a healthy glow and "prepare" my skin for the honeymoon in Turkey.
Then my daughter came along, and she had such beautiful, clear skin, not a blemish or a mark in sight, pretty much how mine had been when I was a baby. And the penny dropped. Being in the sun causes MOLES! You know these mole checks that you're supposed to do once a month? It would take me a month to do mine...what is it, more than 50 and you could be at risk of developing melanoma.. I have more that 50 on one arm alone... anyhoo, I digress...
But what I'm saying is I am that person that sunbathed, I am that person that used a sunbed, but am I to blame? In 1964 was it wrong to take your child to play on a beach in the South of France? In 1977 was it wrong to be at the lido with all my friends, having fun in the sun, sniffing in the heady aroma of Ambre Solaire and eating ice cream? In 1980 was it wrong to be lounging on the beach in Sitges waiting for the helados man to come around, with my super expensive SPF 7 Bergasol cream?
Well if it was wrong, I wish someone had told me then.
I'm not shirking responsibility here, because back then I don't think responsibility came into it. By and large we were just not aware of the damage that the sun could cause. I have melanoma, it certainly almost is as a result of my lifestyle, but is it my fault? I say no.
Now, if I develop lung cancer as a result of smoking, I will accept that that is my fault... entirely...bacause I was warned, I know the risks.
Marsha x
