Showing posts with label sun burn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sun burn. Show all posts

Thursday, July 16, 2026

Heat Rash, Sunburn, and the Itchiness of Regret

 Let’s talk about two things that will ruin a perfectly good summer day faster than a sudden thunderstorm: heat rash and sunburn. One is a prickly little nuisance. The other is a fiery betrayal of your own good sense. Both are avoidable. Both will make you miserable. And both are very, very funny in retrospect (but not at 2:00 AM when you can’t stop scratching).

Heat Rash (a.k.a. Prickly Heat)

You’ve been outside. It’s humid. You’re wearing that nice cotton shirt, but the collar is a little snug. Or you’ve been sitting in your favorite patio chair with the plastic weave that doesn’t breathe. Later, you notice a patch of tiny red bumps on your neck, your chest, or inside your elbows. It itches. It prickles. It feels like a thousand ants having a very aggressive meeting on your skin.

That’s heat rash. It happens when sweat ducts get clogged. The sweat can’t get out, so it backs up under the skin and causes inflammation. Your body’s cooling system has a traffic jam.

The cure (and it’s easy):

  • Get cool and dry. Go inside. Air conditioning is your best friend. A fan helps too.
  • Take a cool shower and pat dry (don’t rub, rubbing makes it angrier).
  • Wear loose, breathable clothing. Cotton and linen are your summer superheroes. Polyester is the villain.
  • Do NOT use heavy creams or ointments. They’ll clog the ducts more. Calamine lotion or a light hydrocortisone cream (the 1% stuff) can help with itching, but ask your pharmacist first.
  • Stay out of the heat until the rash fades. Usually 24 to 48 hours.

Heat rash is annoying, but it’s not dangerous. Consider it your body’s passive-aggressive way of saying, “You should have gone inside an hour ago, Doris.”

Sunburn (The One You Really Want to Avoid)

Ah, sunburn. The great equalizer. You think, “I’ll just be out for twenty minutes.” Twenty minutes turns into two hours because the neighbor started telling you about their grandson’s orthodontia. And now you look like a lobster that went to a tanning salon.

Here’s the thing about sun exposure as a senior. Your skin is thinner. It’s been through a lot, decades of birthdays, gravity, and that one unfortunate tanning oil incident in 1975. It heals more slowly now. And sunburn isn’t just painful; it’s a genuine injury. It raises your risk of skin infections, dehydration, and even heat exhaustion because your skin loses its ability to regulate temperature when it’s fried.

So let’s prevent it with three absurdly simple rules:

  1. Sunscreen isn’t optional. SPF 30 or higher. Broad spectrum. Put it on thirty minutes before you go out. Reapply every two hours, or immediately after sweating or swimming. Yes, it’s annoying. Yes, it smells like a coconut factory. Do it anyway.
  2. The sun is meanest between 10 AM and 4 PM. That’s when it’s directly overhead, laughing at your floppy hat. If you can garden or walk before 10 AM or after 4 PM, you’ll get the same fresh air with about half the UV damage.
  3. Cover up like you’re going to rob a bank. Wide-brimmed hat. Long sleeves made of lightweight, light-colored fabric. Sunglasses (your eyes can get sunburned too, yes, really). There’s a reason people in hot climates have worn robes for thousands of years. Shade is power.

If you do get burned (because we all slip up sometimes):

  • Cool baths or cool compresses. No ice directly on the skin.
  • Aloe vera gel. Keep it in the fridge for extra soothing.
  • Drink extra water. Sunburn pulls fluid to the skin’s surface, leaving the rest of you dehydrated.
  • Ibuprofen can help with pain and inflammation.
  • If you get blisters, don’t pop them. That’s a bandage your body made. And if you have fever, chills, or feel nauseous, call your doctor.

A little prevention keeps the Dog Days from turning into the “Why Did I Do That Days.” Be smarter than Sirius. Slather on that sunscreen. Your future self, the un-lobstered, non-itchy one, will thank you.