meltdown75
Lifer
- Nov 17, 2004
 
- 37,548
 
- 7
 
- 81
 
i live in my parent's basement. i've never been outside, but i hear the graphics are amazing, like - better than 4x AAI'm starting to wonder where some of you people live and if you ever go outside.
i live in my parent's basement. i've never been outside, but i hear the graphics are amazing, like - better than 4x AAI'm starting to wonder where some of you people live and if you ever go outside.
What are you people smoking? A person with a tan looks WAY better than the same person without one, even if it's an obvious tanning bed tan. Skin just looks better when it is beige or light brown in color, rather than the sickly yellowish look of untanned skin.
OP, I'd start with 15 minutes a day as you suggest unless you have unusually sensitive skin. That wouldn't be enough for me to burn. You may want to double that time after the first week or so.
Untanned skin doesn't look sickly yellowish for anyone I have ever known ever.
And tanning bed tans tend to look horrible.
i like the soft milky skin of Marcia Cross. i bet that broad has never had a tan. but she has probably been milked.Disagree. I like the look of a woman with soft, milky skin. A girl with a fake tan tells me she is trying too hard. Not to mention that insistence of having a tan = crap skin later in life.
A guy worrying about his tan tells me other things. . .
I liked it better when they looked like Gollum. Now they look like they were just released from Auschwitz. Keep the non-tanned people stuff coming, this is good.I've seen quite a few people with disgusting translucent yellowish skin that looks like it's made of some light colored cheese. These people often have terrible complexions too. To be fair, there are probably other health factors in play there as well, but I'd bet getting more sunlight would improve their health and appearance tenfold.
Do like 5-10 minutes, the first day, 10-15 minutes the second day, etc. You have to build it up. If you do this, you will develop some color. Don't overdo it.
And yes, there's a cancer risk.
