summer safety
- Protecting Your Skin from the Sun
- Are You Beach-Ready? Get Essential Summer Safety Tips
- Water Wisdom
- 7 Hot Tips for Supple Summer Skin
- 5 Ways to Protect Your Eyes From the Sun
- Stay Healthy While Traveling
- Get Outside and Walk
- Heat Emergencies: Knowing the Symptoms and How to React
- 3 Pool Exercises That Won't Embarrass You
- Mosquito-Borne Illnesses: What They Are and How to Prevent Them
- Outdoor Food Safety: Don't Let Spoiled Dishes Ruin Your Barbecue
- Hot Weather and Exercise: How to Safely Sweat It Out in the Summer
- Lyme Disease: How to Avoid It and How to Spot It
7 Hot Tips for Supple Summer Skin
The key to healthy skin lies beyond which soap you use. It depends on what you eat, whether you exercise, how much stress you are under and even the kind of environment in which you live and work. Summer is particularly harsh on skin so consider these seven tips for helping your skin survive the harsh rays of summer:
1. Take advantage of all the summer fruits and vegetables and eat a varied and nutritious diet. Studies show that diets high in saturated fat, including meat, butter and full-fat dairy, as well as soft drinks, cakes and pastries increased the likelihood of skin wrinkling. Follow a diet high in vitamin A, E and C and essential fatty acids.
2. Don't forget to wash down your nutritious foods with a big glass of water. In fact, aim for at least eight to 10 glasses of water a day for optimum skin results.
3. Get out in the warm weather and exercise! Exercise flushes impurities out of your skin and promotes production of sebum, or oil, you skin's natural moisturizer and enhances blood flow to the skin.
4. Here's another reason to stop smoking...smoking constricts blood vessels, reducing blood flow to the skin. It also depletes levels of valuable antioxidant vitamins like vitamin A, increasing damage to the elasticity of the skin.
5. Of course, the greatest damage to your skin occurs from the ultraviolet rays of the sun. When it comes to sunscreen, the higher the SPF, the better. Few people use sunscreen the right way — apply a full ounce every couple of hours, more if you've been swimming or sweating.
