Because of what people know now about skin cancer, a distinctively gothic look is healthier than a celebrity sun tan. Although it is a compelling look, certainly, it’s not one that everyone can pull off. It takes a specific kind of hair and eye coloring, at home in the dark of winter, and it’s hard to be that stylish and gloomy all year round. So even though the kinds of tans seen in the celebrity magazines of the 70s now look hideously unhealthy, there is something about skin that has a glow. That inner glow is often considered to be a reflection of a healthy inner life, and that’s one of the most magnetic things anyone can cultivate.
Healthy skin actually does glow. Like anything that is considered attractive over time and across cultures, there are roots and reasons why color in the skin is taken as a sign of inner beauty. Since it is clear that a lot of time in the sun is not a good thing, that does take some of the pressure off of anyone looking to create a perfect look. Healthy skin does not have to become a job, but is actually a deeper reflection of healthy lifestyles.
The relation between skin and diet is an obvious one, perhaps. Since the skin is a barometer of overall health, there is much to suggest that skin deep is much deeper than one might suspect. This organ is here to serve as protection, and is also the organ responsible for giving warning signs for internal problems. So it would figure that overall nutritional health is going to show in the skin. Indeed it does.
Taking this a step further, it might seem likely that one can help the coloring in their skin by eating certain foods. And one can, in fact, eat foods that promote tanning. That inner glow is something that can be affected with nutrition, and of course this makes perfect sense to those who subscribe to the idea that we are what we eat. Consuming a lot of vitamin C, it turns out, can actually hinder the way the sun’s rays work on the skin, but vitamins A and E can do wonders for it. This is also true for foods that are high in beta-carotene. In fact, the general principle here is that those very same foods that are promoted as being very healthy are the same ones that can make the skin look fresher, and even glow. Those same foods that are healthy for the inner organs are also the ones that look healthy on our most external organ, the skin.


