Why I Eat My Sunscreen to Protect Skin From the Inside Out

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Eat your Sunscreen?
Wellness Mama » Blog » Health » Why I Eat My Sunscreen to Protect Skin From the Inside Out

As warmer weather approaches (yay!), it’s time to start thinking about digging out the kids’ clothes, bathing suits, and flip flops. This is also my cue to start getting my skin ready for the sun.

Why not wait until the first beach day? Because I now eat my sunscreen rather than just wear it.

I’ve long been fed up with the ingredients in sunscreen (more on that in this post) and believe it often does more harm than good. The more I researched the more I found that exposure to the sun isn’t a problem (it’s actually a benefit) if you feed your skin the right nutrients to get it ready for sun exposure.

The sun isn’t the problem, which is why I take a different approach. I get safe sun exposure and protect my skin from the inside out. (And of course, cover up or get out of the sun when my skin has had enough!)

Why the Sun Isn’t the Enemy

There seems to be an underlying idea that sun exposure = skin cancer and that sunscreen = protection from skin cancer. But the research doesn’t back this up. In fact, it may susggest the opposite. Think about this: Skin cancer rates are rising despite more sunscreen use and reduced sun exposure in recent decades.

Science backs up this approach. A 2016 review in the journal Dermato-Endocrinology concluded that while prevention of skin cancer is important, being afraid of the sun isn’t a good answer. From their findings:

This review considers the studies that have shown a wide range health benefits from sun/UV exposure. These benefits include among others various types of cancer, cardiovascular disease, Alzheimer disease/dementia, myopia and macular degeneration, diabetes and multiple sclerosis. The message of sun avoidance must be changed to acceptance of non-burning sun exposure sufficient to achieve serum 25(OH)D concentration of 30 ng/mL or higher in the sunny season and the general benefits of UV exposure beyond those of vitamin D. (emphasis added)

This is the reason I don’t avoid the sun, but rather make a point to get sun exposure every day. I also avoid sunscreen for the most part, and just get out of the sun or cover up when I have had enough sun exposure for the day.

How I Stopped Burning

Here was my dilemma…

I’m partially Irish-Scottish (which is Latin for very fair skinned!) and had always burned. In fact, even moderate sun exposure would leave me with a pinkish glow rather than a tan … until several years ago.

The research showed the importance of sun exposure for adequate levels of vitamin D and many other aspects of health. Wearing sunscreen greatly reduces vitamin D production, so that wasn’t the answer. I decided to follow the research and start protecting my skin from the inside out. And it worked.

I started working in the garden for hours at a time during the heat of the day without burning. We also went to Florida for vacation and I was at the beach for 4 hours between 11-3 with no sunscreen and I didn’t burn… at all!

To those of you blessed with olive skin (like my husband), this may not seem like a big deal, but to me, this is huge! Finally I no longer look like the pale-stepchild among my Italian in-laws for the first time.

How I Eat My Sunscreen with Diet + Supplements

Just as a poor diet has a negative effect on skin and overall health, a real food diet may offer protection from various health problems, including sun-related ones. Fortunately, the diet and lifestyle factors that are good for the skin have great benefits for general health as well.

Note: This is what worked for me and is in no way medical or dermatological advice. Please do you own research, know your own skin, and find what works best for you.

Here’s how I start preparing my skin for safe sun exposure this summer:

1. Eat a Real Food Diet With Enough Good Fats

A large part of my natural sun protection is eating an anti-inflammatory diet. To make sure the body has the proper building blocks for healthy skin and to reduce inflammation, I consume enough healthy saturated, monounsaturated, and omega-3 fats while avoiding polyunsaturated fatty acids and high omega-6 vegetable oils.

I focus on making sure that my diet is high in micronutrients from vegetables, omega-3s, and fat-soluble vitamins from fish, and monounsaturated and saturated fats from plant and animal sources.

This type of diet will also be beneficial for many other health conditions, and if you’ve been a Wellness Mama reader for any length of time, you know the drill:

Avoid:

  • processed foods
  • vegetable oils (this is the most important for sun exposure)
  • grains
  • sugars

Consume:

  • healthy sources of saturated fats and monounsaturated fats
  • foods rich in omega-3s (fish, etc.)
  • lots of leafy greens
  • 2+ tablespoons of tomato paste daily (I sometimes add this in for the lycopene and skin protection)

2. Eat Antioxidants

Just by avoiding grains and omega-6 oils as well as focusing on proteins, fats, and vegetables instead, your diet will be higher in antioxidants than the standard American diet. Even real food “treats” like berries and dark chocolate are packed with antioxidants.

Antioxidants help reduce inflammation and free radicals. Research has shown a strong protective effect of antioxidants against inflammation and skin damage.
eat your sunscreen natural sun protection alternatives

3. Up the Vitamin D

I’ve noticed the biggest difference in how I feel from optimizing two things: omega-3 consumption and vitamin D levels. I talked about the importance of omega-3s above. Through blood testing, I found that my 25(OH)D level (one measure of vitamin D) was below 25 ng/mL. That was well below the recommendation for pregnant and nursing women and well below the 65 ng/mL recommended by some doctors for optimal health.

Through years of experimenting and continual testing, I found that in order to get my levels above 30 ng/mL I had to get sun exposure and take supplemental vitamin D. Now, with my levels in the 50-60 ng/mL range, my thyroid is doing great and I feel the best I’ve ever felt. I also don’t get sunburned any more!

Why it works: This is a logical if you think about it. Melanin, the dark pigment that we get when we tan, is produced to shield the skin from further UV exposure by providing a type of barrier. This is why those with darker skin need more sun that those with fairer skin to get the same amount of vitamin D.

When the body has enough vitamin D, it will start producing melanin to keep from getting too much. There is evidence that optimizing vitamin D levels through sun exposure and even through supplementation will help the body produce melanin faster and retain it longer. Of course, this is a genetic and very personalized issue that is best handled with testing and the help of a qualified practitioner.

4. Gradual Sun Exposure

Seems simple and logical, but moderate and safe sun exposure has the most benefits for vitamin D levels. Sunburn is never good! I always get less sun exposure than I think I need at first and work up really slowly to avoid burning.

5. Natural Sun Protection

With the recent research on the benefits of sun exposure and the potential harmful substances in many sunscreens, I choose natural ways to protect from the sun once I’ve gotten enough exposure at any time. My first (and best) option is just to cover up or get in the shade if possible. A hat and shirt are reusable, don’t contain harmful chemicals, and do a great job of protecting from excess sun exposure.

If I have to be outside in the bright sun for extended periods of time and can’t seek shade or cover up I’ll sometimes use a natural homemade sunscreen or an EWG-recommended sunscreen.

6. Supplement Support

This time of year, I also start taking a specific regimen of supplements to help reduce inflammation and improve sun tolerance. I’m not a doctor and don’t play one on the Internet, and I’m only sharing the supplements I personally take and why. Check with your doctor before making any health or supplement changes, especially if you have any medical conditions.

The supplements I take are:

  • Vitamin D3 Drops – I take about 2,000 IU/day with sun exposure to keep my levels up. Those drops are 2,000 IU per drop so a bottle lasts us a really long time. I also test my levels a few times a year and stop taking D3 if my levels are high enough.
  • Vitamin C –  I take about 2,000 mg/day. Vitamin C is a potent antioxidant and also has many other benefits to the body.
  • Omega-3s and Krill oil – I’ve experimented with several different brands over the years. I’m currently trying these capsules at the recommendation of Dr. Rhonda Patrick in a recent podcast episode, and I like them so far.
  • Astaxanthin – A highly potent antioxidant that research shows acts as an internal sunscreen. It’s also supposedly an anti-aging supplement. I don’t give this one to the kids though.
  • Polypodium Leucotomos
  • Sundaily “The Base Layer” – These tasty gummies help boost skin’s ability to resist solar damage. They contain polypodium leucotomos extract, a fancy name for a fern long used in parts of the world for sun protection.

Get Some Rays the Right Way

Avoid sunburn from the inside out and the outside in with nutritional support and a hat + rash guard. Take these measures a month or two before beach season starts and condition your skin to love the sun. It’s good for your health anyway and saves money on sunscreen!

This article was medically reviewed by Dr. Robert Galamaga, whois a board-certified internal medicine physician. As always, this is not personal medical advice and we recommend that you talk with your doctor or work with a doctor at SteadyMD.

Do you eat your sunscreen? Still use the toxic stuff? Avoid the sun completely? Tell me below!

Diet and supplements can make a big difference in the bodys ability to tan instead of burn, without using sunscreen. Here is how...

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Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

317 responses to “Why I Eat My Sunscreen to Protect Skin From the Inside Out”

  1. Elizabeth Avatar
    Elizabeth

    I also take Krill Oil gel caps, 1,000 mg per night, along with 2 – 4,000 mg Garlic Oil
    gel caps. I find that one of the best supplements in my regime is Bee Pollen Complex,
    3,000 each morning. When i am trying to lose weight, this is a good food product
    that gives me a lot of good energy even when i don’t eat. I am 70 years old but easily
    pass for 40 years in looks and energy.

  2. Edith Avatar

    Hi Katie, I can not comment in your sun screen recipe chart conversation. So, I am here!. I want you you to ask about some of the ingredients you wear. I am not sure to try those recipes. I actually do not find a good one, because of the use of ingredientes like oils!. Oils used to burn the skin when it is exposed to the sun, coconut oil is mostly use to become burned. The same thing with carrot oil, it use to do a camarilized color in the skin. In my own experience I do not like to use coconut oil because it irritates my skin.
    I really apreciate your blog and your recipes, but could you suggest any other kind of natural sunscreen that do not have oils in it, please. I have googled, and all the recipes are almost the same that yours, sorry!. Best regards, Edith.

  3. Jerri Garofalo Avatar
    Jerri Garofalo

    I would love to avoid otc sunscreens, but I have Lupus and actually am allergic to the sun. While I eat a healthy natural foods diet as much as I can which includes cold water fish like salmon, and also take plenty of take vit D, and other supplements. Still I have to make sure I wear a high level SPF sun screen as it is now understood that sunlight is the culprit in causing organ and tissue problems for people who have this disease. Medical researchers claim that the sunlight causes a toxin to developed in the skin cell, which then ruptures internally, and causes damage to the tissues and organs causing debilitating conditions to heart, digestion, kidneys, liver, veins, eyes, brain and skin etc….. For years i feared the harmful effects SPFs might cause.. I still feel that way, but I have decided my damage from Lupus is so great I have to do something. I already spend a minimal amount of time in the sunlight…I mean darkened rooms in the summer months as it is. Even now being in remission, I still suffer on an average more than someone with a virus, because Lupus f damages the internal organs, muscles and skin, thyroid, heart, liver, etc.. So while even homemade sunscreen would be welcomed, I feel I can not take a chance in this one area. So I worker harder at the other things I can.

  4. Megan Avatar

    How do you supplement little ones with vitamin d? Are those drops safe for them?

  5. Shasha Avatar

    https://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2011/05/25/sunscreen-and-wrinkle-prevention-in-a-pill.aspx

    I can’t have saturated fat…clogs my blood vessels. I avoid too long of time in the sunlight, but enough to make Vit D. Scottish/English/Irish are low sunlight heritage that causes autoimmune Celiac which gluten hurts the gut lining so less nutrients absorb…then the brain/body malfunction.

    Too much zinc may hurt also if people use it to block the sunlight.

  6. kiersten mahon Avatar
    kiersten mahon

    do you still recommend the FCLO/ Royal Butter combo if I’m drinking bulletproof everyday with a tablespoon of grassfed butter and MCT oil? I eat paleo, no processed foods, but have Irish, fair, freckly skin prone to sunburn.

  7. Nimarta Avatar
    Nimarta

    Can a 5 year old take the capsule. Is the size small enough? Or do we have to give her the liquid.

  8. Diane Avatar

    Interesting…thank you. And in case anyone is interested you can also just take Niacin…yep, there is the Niacin flush, which I happen to like, because I feel the boost in my circulation and it is a good detoxifier.
    You can take it orally as a supplement (always good to take with food and plenty of water which helps mitigate the flush, but you can also take lower doses and just build up) and you can also use it topically. You can buy
    it in a bulk powdered form and use it in a good moisturizer or cream. Has LOTS of benefits and very helpful for skin cancer as well.

  9. LC Avatar

    Hi! What could pregnant women take to protect themselves? Are these supplements safe? First pregnancy and I am normally usually very conscious about the type of sunblock I use- but now I am off the charts aware of all the things to avoid. Was considering a big hat and long sleeves to avoid sun all together but now think that’s impracticial 😉 also, do you happen to have the best of the best sunblock/sunscreen brands that you could recommend? I was using alba and the honest company and babo last summer. Could John masters be a better choice?

  10. Leeanna Avatar
    Leeanna

    I would add that making sure our good fats, calcium and magnesium are in proper order in our tissues is the real protection – just to sum it up. That is why codliver oil is so useful, but flax as well – it is these fats that help make sure our minerals are making it into the cells that do the trick. Royal Lee that founded Standard Process talked of this and his supplements Super EFF and Calcium Lactate were the 2 products he recommended to help people who burned easily.

  11. Jaime Hind Avatar
    Jaime Hind

    Hi…. just wondering what the tomato paste is good for? Thanks. x

  12. Kate Avatar

    I was just wondering how you define processed foods? Seems like a rather broad term.

  13. Julia Avatar

    How do you prepare the coconut oil in your tea? Does it not overwhelm the drink?

  14. kim Avatar

    I have always spent a decent of time in the sun with minimal burning even though I am fair skinned and with very minimal sunscreen but a good amount of raw milk and vegetables such as spinach. I am 29 now and have changed to a desk job for the past 2.5 years. In that time my face has become a disaster. I have uneven skin tone and hyperpigmentation on my forehead and around my mouth. I have tried scrubs, creams and started avoiding the sun and using sun screen. It generally has just gotten worse..now I know why probably. Do you think these supplement, diet and more sun exposure would help? I am ready to have my face back! I have also gained a lot of weight which I’m now finally starting to lose again. Not sure if it might be related?

  15. Adam Trainor Avatar
    Adam Trainor

    So I saw and commented on your post about “Why (Most) Sunscreen is Harmful” and I read on that post about the internal body when being out in the sun. It has never crossed my mind, I just thought the sun affected the body onh the outside. When I am in the sun or on vacation, I make sure I drink plenty of water to keep hydrated. I have had sunstroke and its not a nice feeling, your body is on fire and like you said sunburn is inflammation and your body feels inflamed. When you get sunstroke doctors recommend to get sugar back into your body, if you have severe sunstroke in the ER they will put you on a drip and this will have glucose in, yet in the foods to avoid, sugar is listed. You have said to eat tomato paste daily, this is mixed into food right? Does eating tomatoes help? I atually read somewhere that putting tomato on your body for sunburn like yogurt helps to cool sunburn.

  16. Kim B. Avatar

    How much tomato paste should I try to give my 3-year-old. This will be a challenge!

  17. Jamie Avatar

    Do you have an update to this blog post re: using the vitamins and supplements with kiddos? My 2 yr old loves to be outside, and while I am in the process of getting the ingredients to make my own sunscreen, I would like some extra protection for his baby skin. Do you have any recommendations as far as “eating your sunscreen” for kids?

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