162:  Toxins in your Food Causing Sun Sensitivity pt 1
22 December 2025

162: Toxins in your Food Causing Sun Sensitivity pt 1

Nutrition Prescription: Wellness vs Medications

About

This episode explains how certain foods—especially seed oils, processed grains, and specific plants—can make your skin much more sensitive to the sun and cause burning, rashes, and even blistering that looks like a bad sunburn. You will learn why the sun itself is not the main problem, how plant toxins like furanocoumarins work, and how shifting to more saturated animal fats and whole foods can help your skin handle sun exposure better.

Why sunlight is so important

    Sunlight helps balance hormones, lift mood, and support your natural sleep–wake rhythm (cortisol in the morning, melatonin at night).

    Sun on the skin is needed for vitamin D and has been essential for humans, animals, and plants throughout history.

    The goal is to get regular, gradual sun without burning—not to avoid the sun or always hide behind sunscreen.

How diet makes you burn more

    Many people burn easier now not just because of time in the sun, but because of what they eat.

    Seed oils (polyunsaturated oils) and ultra‑processed grains create oxidative stress and make skin cells more fragile in the sun.

    Every cell membrane is made of fat; when those fats are mostly unstable polyunsaturated oils, UV light damages them more easily and leads to inflammation and burning.

    When people switch to low‑carb, animal‑based, keto/carnivore style eating with more saturated fats, many notice they can stay in the sun longer without burning.

Plant chemicals that react with the sun

    Some plants make defense chemicals called furanocoumarins to protect themselves from insects, fungi, and being eaten.

    In humans, these chemicals can cause phytophotodermatitis: plant + light + skin = inflammation and burn‑like reactions.

    These compounds can be absorbed through the skin or by eating the plant; once in the body, they can stay for hours to days and increase sun sensitivity.

    The reaction often looks like a severe sunburn with redness, blisters, dark streaks, and peeling, even when sun exposure was not extreme.

Common foods that increase sun sensitivity

    Citrus, especially limes, are a major trigger; bartenders, gardeners, and vacationers with lime drinks in the sun often get streaky burns and blisters on hands and arms.

    Other citrus like lemons and grapefruits can also make skin more reactive to UV light.

    Celery, parsley, parsnips and similar plants have high levels of these "phototoxins," and field workers handling them often develop painful streaks and rashes that cannot simply be washed off.

    Juicing or eating large amounts of raw versions of these plants can load the skin with these chemicals and set you up for a bad "burn" when you hit strong sun.

Plants, toxins, and why "healthy" isn't always harmless

    Not all fruits and vegetables are automatically safe in all amounts; many plants contain toxins and antinutrients meant to protect the plant.

    Examples include oxalates, lectins, and phytates that can damage the gut lining or block nutrient absorption, contributing to GI problems like IBS, colitis, reflux, and more.

    Story: A daily "healthy" green juice with kale, spinach, and apple led to bleeding in the bladder area due to oxalate crystals from those greens; stopping the juice stopped the bleeding.

    Raw plant parts like potato skins can be especially toxic; many traditional cultures always peel potatoes for this reason.

Fruits, seeds, and man‑made changes

    Only three foods are truly "designed" to be eaten: honey (for bees), milk (for infants), and ripe fruit (to spread seeds).

    A fruit is basically the plant's ovary, carrying seeds; when seeds are ripe, the fruit sweetens to invite animals to eat and spread them.

    Seedless grapes and seedless watermelons are no longer true fruits in this sense and are products of genetic manipulation and added chemicals.

Man‑made food, inflammation, and skin

    Ultra‑processed "man‑made" foods with refined grains, inflammatory seed oils, and sugars create massive oxidative stress and chronic inflammation in the gut and whole body.

    An already‑inflamed body plus plant toxins like furanocoumarins makes skin even more sensitive to the sun and more likely to burn or rash with normal sun exposure.

    Many modern gut issues (Crohn's, IBD, IBS, reflux, colitis) are tied to these processed foods and certain plant compounds.

Sunscreen, sun fear, and a better approach

    Many people think they are just "sensitive to the sun" and respond by lathering on more sunscreen, without realizing foods may be the problem.

    Commercial sunscreens often contain chemicals that are absorbed more deeply into the skin when heated by the sun and when blood vessels are dilated.

    A healthier strategy:

      Gradually build sun exposure in the spring and summer so you tan instead of burn.

      Cut back on seed oils, ultra‑processed foods, and big loads of raw, high‑furanocoumarin plants (like celery juice and heavy citrus) before going into intense sun.

      Center your diet on whole, animal‑based foods with natural saturated fats (tallow, lard, etc.) plus small amounts of well‑prepared fruits and vegetables as tolerated.

 

    Next episode will dig into practical steps to protect your skin from the inside out, how to make your skin more sun‑resistant, and what to use instead of toxic sunscreens.

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      Disclaimer:  The information provided on this channel/podcast/publication is for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as a substitute for advice from your physician or other qualified healthcare provider. Always consult your doctor before making any changes to your diet, exercise routine, or medications.