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i think you need to hate yourself to use one bc the pain is horrible.Somebody brought up epilators to me, but they where selling it too good and made me wonder if anyone uses one and if its better than regular old razors
I use tweezers so i didn't think the pain would be that much different. I just want that baby skin smoothnessi think you need to hate yourself to use one bc the pain is horrible.
open question but do people do this usually? i've been going to doctors in the poor neighborhoods and they refuse pretty much any prescriptions or treatments and i find it hard to believe everyone is jumping from doc to doc. a friend just found out their doctor who they went to for over a decade straight up missed a cancer diagnosis and its making me wonder if i should venture to a more "upscale" city for advice.and went to another doctor
Adapalene (Differin) was a gamechanger for me-I never had severe acne but I literally never get blackheads and only a pimple every other month at worstI know Benzoyl peroxide is the main acne killing ingredient but are there any better/other ones people are using? it seems like every treatment is just a bunch of nonsense and Benzoyl Peroxide. also skin purging has to be bullshit right? 3 months to find out if you're fucking up your skin?
I have one. Yeah it'll hurt the first time but you'll get used to it, same with waxing. I epilate my leg below the knee, and sugar wax elsewhere.i think you need to hate yourself to use one bc the pain is horrible.
I use an epilator for my legs (below and above-knee). Love it. I find waxing pain therapeutic, though, for a frame of reference. I put it on high and don't even use a guard, but for starters there's a low setting.I have one. Yeah it'll hurt the first time but you'll get used to it, same with waxing. I epilate my leg below the knee, and sugar wax elsewhere.
Tried the IPL device and got ripped off, even though I really wanted it. Though exfoliating is a must for epilation else you'll get strawberry legs/ingrowns.
That moisturizer is probably not great for your skin type, since it's for normal to dry skin. I'd recommend you try this stuffCerave AM facial moisturizer.
What immediately sticks out to me about your routine thats bad is the fact you’re mechanically exfoliating your skin but not chemically. You’re irritating your skin into producing more oils, leading to clogged pores. Try this:So I'm hoping you skin care experts can help me, I'm a man (of the XY chromosome variety, not the pooner variety) with the bastard combination of very oily skin and giant moon-crater pores and I've struggled for years to figure out the best way to cleanse the skin on my face. Right now I'm using a wet towel to remove excess dead skin from my face (God knows I always have a lot of that), followed up by Cerave foaming facial cleanser, which I then wash off in the shower. Once I'm out of the shower, I apply Cerave AM facial moisturizer. While this works pretty well, I notice that the skin on my forehead still comes out looking kinda lumpy and splotchy, and if I apply that moisturizer to my nose, I'm pretty much guaranteed to get a pimple somewhere there. So I moisturize everything on my face EXCEPT my nose, which doesn't seem right.
Any ideas as to what I should be doing differently?
I have no idea what any of it does, I let an ex tell me what to use when we thought we were going to get married and she wanted to protect her investment, and just kept doing the same thing after we broke up. However, I've heard conflicting information recently and I'm starting to doubt that she knew what she was talking about.
How often should I be applying these things, what time of day, in what order, and how long should I wait between each step?
This is an exfoliant. You're peeling away dead skin. Shouldn't be done too often, particularly not with a retinol, once or twice a week should be plenty.glycolic resurfacing pads
Prevents sun damage, but it's nowhere near as effective as a sunscreen would be. Use daily.vitamin c serum
Speeds up the skin cycle, which slows visible aging, improves skin texture, and slightly reduces wrinkles. Use daily.retinol serum
HLA is a component in good moisturizers. Use twice daily, you "slug" yourself in the evening with a night cream, and use a much less visible day cream in the mornings.hyaluronic acid and a moisturizer.
CeraVe can be good for skin barrier renewal, but it's more of a maintenance thing where it neither hurts nor helps but rather maintains the bare minimum. My suggestions for a relatively simple routine:So I'm hoping you skin care experts can help me, I'm a man (of the XY chromosome variety, not the pooner variety) with the bastard combination of very oily skin and giant moon-crater pores and I've struggled for years to figure out the best way to cleanse the skin on my face. Right now I'm using a wet towel to remove excess dead skin from my face (God knows I always have a lot of that), followed up by Cerave foaming facial cleanser, which I then wash off in the shower. Once I'm out of the shower, I apply Cerave AM facial moisturizer. While this works pretty well, I notice that the skin on my forehead still comes out looking kinda lumpy and splotchy, and if I apply that moisturizer to my nose, I'm pretty much guaranteed to get a pimple somewhere there. So I moisturize everything on my face EXCEPT my nose, which doesn't seem right.
Any ideas as to what I should be doing differently?