In April 2015, a 27-year-old woman from Texas in the United States, decided to share an unedited picture of her face.
With a towel on her head, Tawny Willoughby’s nose and cheeks were covered in red, blistering scabs. The sores travelled up to her forehead, with some appearing infected.
It was the kind of image that was simply impossible to scroll past.
The caption read, “If anyone needs a little motivation to not lay in the tanning bed and sun here ya go!
“This is what skin cancer treatment can look like. Wear sunscreen and get a spray tan. Learn from other people’s mistakes. Don’t let tanning prevent you from seeing your children grow up. That’s my biggest fear now that I have a two year old little boy of my own.”
Willoughby shared that while she was in high school, she would frequently tan, sometimes up to four times a week. She also used tanning beds.
At 21 years old, she had her first skin cancer diagnosis. For the next six years, she saw a dermatologist every six to 12 months, and would have skin cancers removed at each check up.
She wrote, “Skin cancer is not always moles, only one of mine have been a mole. Get any suspicious, new and growing spot checked out… anything that doesn’t heal, possibly bleeds on and off and crusts…”
LISTEN: The late Emma Betts speaks to Mia Freedman about dying of cancer in your 20s.