Melanin
by MAD Writer Productions
Melanin is important because it's the most primitive and universal pigment
in living organisms. Melanin is produced in the pineal gland. Abundantly found
in primitive organisms such as fungi, as well as advanced primates. Furthermore
within each living organism, melanin appears to be located in the major
functional sites. For example, in vertebrates, melanin is not only present in
the skin, eyes, ears, central nervous system, it can also be found in the pineal
gland, pituitary gland, thyroid gland, thymus gland, adrenal gland, and the
barathary gland. Melanin is abundantly present in the viscera, including the
heart, liver, arteries, the muscles, and the gastrointestinal tract. Thus,
within each and every living organ which aids the human body melanin appears.
Regardless of what color your skin appears to be all genes in all creatures on
this planet are black because they are coated with melanin.
The amount of melanin in the skin is one of the most variable of human
traits, and many polygenes are involved. Groups of people or the population of
the world were once classified according to the skin shade: Black (Nubians),
White (Caucasians), Yellow (Orientals) and Red (Native Americans) etc.. We must
realize that just because this is the way they have classified people does not
mean this is the way it should be. The hues of color of your skin depends on
several factors. First is the amount of melanin in the outer layers of the skin.
melanin acts as a filter to prevent damage to the delicate deeper layers of the
skin, by penetration of ultraviolet light.
There are more than one type of melanin. You have brain melanin, also known
as neuro-melanin, and you have skin melanin. Neuro-melanin does not run parallel
with skin melanin, Whether white, red, yellow, black, or brown, neuro-melanin,
plays an important role in functioning of the brain, and nervous system.
Melanosomes (small structures within the melanocyte cells where melanin is
synthesized) find their way into the hair cells, giving them color. (Two types
of melanin, one dark brown and one red, are responsible for all hair shades).
Pigments that contribute to skin color are called carotene, a yellowish
hemoglobin, in blood vessels (pink-red), and melanin (black, brown, red). Darker
skins are dominated by melanin, which is produced from the amino acid tyrosine,
by pigment cells (melanocytes) in the skin. Melanocytes are characterized by
long, fixed extensions of the outer cell membrane. In humans, other mammals, and
birds, melanin is dispersed permanently throughout each melanocyte, including
the extensions, and is also, transported to nearby skin cells. In other words,
if you increase the amount of melanin in the skin you become darker and vice
versa.
So, what is so important about melanin? Melanin controls all mental and physical body activities. Melanin is an extremely stable molecule, and highly
resistant to the digestion by most acids and bases, and is one of the hardest
molecule to ever be analyzed. If you do not purify your melanin molecule, you
will not heal your body of diseases.
In parts of Africa, India, and Australia the deposits of melanin in the skin
is heaviest because the people have been exposed to the most intense sunlight for
generations. Northern Europeans have the least amount of deposits in their skin
are lighter, not to mention their weather is cloudy and cool. The thick- ness of
the outer layer of the skin is also a factor. People with darker skin complexions
have thicker layers of skin. And this is a factor alone enhances
the skins filtering effect. The thinner the skin the least melanin. When the
skin is very thin, the blood vessels show through and give a pinkish color. When
an individual adapts to the shifting of the intensity of the sunlight, the skin
becomes darker because they are exposed to more sunlight. That's how you get
suntans because it's the result of both thickening and increasing the melanin in
the skin. Keratin is the substance the nails of the fingers and toes are made
of. It also appears in the outer layer of the skin. When keratin deposits are
heavy, the skin has a yellowish, brown shade, as in the Mongolian populations.
They have adapted along a different pathway to avoid the damaging effects of
ultraviolet light. The reddish hue of the Native Americans results from a
combination of keratin and melanin deposits.
Now, you might be asking yourself what does melanin have to do with ultra-
violet light? Well, the DNA molecule are all covered with melanin. One of the
things that melanin does is it actually absorbs ultraviolet radiation. Melanin
is constantly reaching out towards the ultraviolet rays of the sun. Ultraviolet
radiation has been found to be dangerous to protein. When protein is passed
through ultraviolet radiation it actually causes the molecule to blend. Just
like you have some of our sisters and brothers who go to hair dressers, killing
their ethers just to get their hair done. No offense to those who do this type
of activity so don't go off the deep end with me. I'm not here to tell you what
you should do or not do because you have your own mind but if you choose to go
to hair dressers and get up under these strange lights and you have to wear a
special kind of glasses with it because of the ultraviolet radiation.
When your ethers are exposed to the chemical or protein structure in those
perms and tents it causes it to lock into a certain position, then your hair
will not change. That's the same thing that happens to your chromosomes or
genes. When ultraviolet rays are exposed to the chromosomes or the genes, in
order for your genes to be able to do what they are suppose to do naturally,
they have to be able to change. But when they are exposed to ultraviolet
radiation they can't. Thus when the time or need comes for it to change they
will not be able to change. This will result in deformities in your body.
Melanin can also be toxic. Eating the improper foods or overeating can block
your connection with the sun energy's. When the sun's energy cannot reach the
melanin, diseases manifest. Melanin is deranged only when it becomes toxic. Any
individual who might have toxic melanin will act in a very similar manner, that
which is primitive, animalistic, and barbaric. It is a civilizing chemical when
it is not toxic. It has physical properties, and personality traits, which
distinguishes it from others. That's why our bodies is dedicated to making
melanin.
Vitamin B keeps melanin clean., not to mention good eating habits. If you
want to continue to consume pork, smoke weed, and drink alcohol that's your own
business but your body is dedicated to making melanin, thus if you make it
toxic, you're only hurting yourself. Melanin is like a superconductor, or like a
battery in a car. it always stay charged when it is exposed to things such as
light, sound, color, and sun light. It will absorb it to the point where the
melanin will actually absorb the additional energy and recharge it- self to a
brand new level.
Your body has committed itself to creating melanin so you can survive. The
melanin in your body is always partially charged. When you look around things
like sound, light, sun light, or colors, the melanin will absorb the additional
energy, and recharge itself, taking your body to a another level. If you're
around sounds that aren't good for you your body reacts to it. Your melanin can
convert light energy to sound energy, that's why an entertainer like Michael
Jackson, who was a big hit back in the days. What he was doing was using his
melanin to convert light energy to sound energy. Now that he is lacking melanin
he hasn't been able to really get a big hit like in the past. People with
melanin are walking radios and the very dark skinned people are very sensitive
to the different types of radio frequency or thought patterns that are in the
environment. So everything you do, everything you listen to, everything you eat,
affects you. It affects your melanin.
Food for Thought:
1. African Holistic Health by Llaila O. Afrika
2. Melanite Children by Dr. Malachi Z. York
3. Any Books on Melanin (so go to your
library of medical libraries)
MAD Writers have done it again. E-mail the MAD Writers or call us at
(313)487- 3877 for more information.