If the new season has put a spring in your step, it might be because longer days naturally replenish your vitamin D. Your body needs this fat-soluble vitamin to function properly, as it affects many areas of your body, including your bones, brain, immune system, and muscles. But unlike many other vitamins, it’s easier to get your daily dose from an afternoon stroll than the foods you eat. Click through the slideshow to learn more about how vitamin D is one of the most important and fascinating nutrients you consume—and make!—on a daily basis.
Human Photosynthesis: How Longer Days Help Replenish Your Vitamin D
Your winter blues likely had a physical cause.
By Robert Davis,
Robert Davis
Robert is a Los-Angeles-based writer and social media content creator for major U.S. hospitals and other medical institutions.
Addison Eaton
The best days involve dirt and paint. The worst days involve forgotten avocados.















Hungry and ready.Photo credit
The mac and cheese staple presentation.Photo credit
Pizza ready from the oven.Photo credit
Friends hover around the barbeque.Photo credit
Seafood platter on the beach.Photo credit
Scarecrow watches over a vegetable garden.Photo credit 


Happiness next exit.Photo credit:
Butterflies in a flower patch.Photo credit:
Happy running doggie.Photo credit:
Positive confirmation.Photo credit: 

Gif from Schitt's Creek via 

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