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First face laser session

Started by zog, January 20, 2015, 03:24:25 AM

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zog

So I had my first face laser session today and hooooollyyyy **** **** ****! I had prepared for it to hurt, but I didn't have a clue. I have very sensitive skin, so that was a factor since even the nurse seemed a bit surprised about how tender my skin looked afterwards.

Any tips you folks have found to make it less excruciating? I'm booked to go back in about a month and a half.

And for those who haven't experienced it yet - don't get too scared or put off by my story. Just remember: beauty knows no pain.
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Jennygirl

I think my pain tolerance increased tenfold due to laser hair removal.

How to make it less painful? Keep going ;) The less hair there is, the less pain. The first session is like D-Day on your face. The next couple will be pretty bad as well, but by the fourth or fifth it will become much easier. Just have to stick with it!
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Samantha6string

Tried numbing cream. Kinda helps.....not much, i just wiggle the hell outta my toes and focus on that, I tend to tense my whole body with each zap. Stopps me from jerking away.

Hurts less and less with every session.

Just remember it'll be totally worth it, and it is :)
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Jennygirl

Lol.. I remember thinking of some funny stuff sitting in that chair getting my face zapped...

First one I just thought of the laser as a scanner, trying to just completely disconnect myself from the pain. It actually worked. You get into a rhythm with it and you can really take a lot.

Second one I put myself in the shoes of the laser. I was thinking HA! Yeah! Take THAT! And THAT! Stupid hair! Gotcha!

It got to the point where my doctor told me he couldn't believe how determined I was, that most of his patients would be crying and/or slapping him with how hard he was zapping me. I would just say "keep going & give me all that my skin can handle!" He would reluctantly go further, still careful not to burn me though
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JessicaAnne

I am going for my first laser session this Friday for my face.  I haven't started HRT .

Any suggestions about preparing.

Thanks

Jessica
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Obfuskatie


Quote from: JessicaAnne on January 20, 2015, 07:21:50 AM
I am going for my first laser session this Friday for my face.  I haven't started HRT .

Any suggestions about preparing.

Thanks

Jessica
Deep breaths.  Apply numbing cream 15-30 minutes prior to the session, to allow it to absorb.
Afterward, make sure you have good high SPF sunscreen, your skin will be very photosensitive for a while. Products like Tendskin may help you avoid ingrown hairs.

I've done lasers on my face some, but have mostly gone with electrolysis.  The upper lip is always the worst, and used to make me reflexively cringe.  Now when I go to electrolysis sessions I meditate when she works on my upper lip.  I'll still have tears dripping down occasionally, but I can stay still and don't feel it as much. 

Btdubs, electrolysis is way more painful than laser, but more effective on each individual hair.  Laser is great for coverage and time, although becomes less effective the more your facial hair thins out.

Laser treatments seem to need a little over a month of time to elapse between them. Each follicle has about a month and a half long growth cycle, but the laser treatments need several weeks for the most effected hairs to fall out, then a few weeks for new growth that can be lasered.

Umm, the last thing I can think of is that you have to be patient.  Hair removal is really effective, however it'll probably take you around 2years to get rid of most of your facial hair.

Good luck, and remember, beauty is pain. [emoji24]
Thank goodness getting my [emoji139][emoji140] doesn't hurt.  I'd love doing them slightly less if it did.


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If people are what they eat, I really need to stop eating such neurotic food  :icon_shakefist:
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akegia

I might have a pretty high pain threshold then, Laser never hurt for me. The only thing that sucks is the cold air the machine blows on your face. The laser zaps felt like nothing to me.

Putting a cold compress on your face afterwards can help quite a bit or so I was told.
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Sabrina

This is an easy one. Make sure you ask for numbing cream and how to get it. I've done eight sessions before with one to go for my chest, abdomen, and front of neck. Numbing cream is a God send, don't do laser without it.
- Sabrina

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ainsley

Like Jennygirl said, the only way to lessen the pain is to get the first one over with. lol  I also raised my pain tolerance level at the first session.  Then in subsequent sessions I was bracing for that initial pain, but it never happened like that because the dark hairs are less and less.  After the first few sessions my face was pretty red and even a little swollen, but that gets less and less over time and more sessions.  The cool compress immediately afterward helps a lot.  My dermatologist also said that it hurts less if you avoid caffeine that day, too (something I simply forget each time. ha).

Good luck & Have fun!  Just keep thinking about how nice it will be to not have that 5 o'clock shadow!
Some people say I'm apathetic, but I don't care.

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Shape of A GIRL!
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suzifrommd

I used hypnotic pain control.

Imagine a control panel in your brain that controls how your body feels sensation. Imagine a pain knob. Try turning it up and feeling how you can make sensations hurt more. Once you know how to do that, it's no problem to turn it down so you feel less pain. The more you practice the easier it will get and the more control you will have.
Have you read my short story The Eve of Triumph?
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Eva Marie

Have your doctor write you a prescription for a numbing cream containing a lidocaine/benzocaine/tetracane blend and have it mixed at a compounding pharmacy. Put it on about an hour before the session and put Saran Wrap on your face to keep it from drying out. You can still feel the zaps but they are not nearly as bad.
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Jill F

A simple and inexpensive thing to do is to apply an ice pack briefly after each "zap".  I did my last 4 sessions without numbing cream this way.
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DrummerGirl

I just envision myself back in childhood, where my friends and I would thwack each other with rubber bands.  Then I rejoice in the fact that I don't have to do "boy" stuff anymore.  The pain seems a lot less after that.



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Trini

I'll be starting my own sessions next month. BRING ON THE PAIN!! >D

It's worth it, that's what keeps me going. <3

I wish you luck on yours.
7/11/14: Acceptance
10/12/14: HRT
4/10/15: FT
7/17/15: Name & Gender Change
10/12/17: Three Years HRT
1/16/19: Trach Shave Surgery

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Tori

My Tech gave me stress balls for each hand to squeeze.

Crying silently seems to help, hehe.

Really, just reminding myself that I was zapping them away once and for all would give me added resolve, the trick is remembering to think that while getting zapped.

Oh, and a bit of OTC painkiller like ibuprofen an hour or so prior seems to help but check with your doc about that stuff so I am not in violation of Susan's rules.


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lilredneckgirl

Lordie  do  I  remember  laser  hair  removal.  like  15  years  ago,  pain,  skin  burns,  ouch !  still  hurts  just  thinking  about  it. 
i  used  over  the  counter  numbing  cream.  i  reckon  it was  the  thought  that  counted. 
  a  friend  had  a  friend  that  was  a dentist.  she  would  stop there  before  her  laser  appointment  and  get  a  few  shots  of  novacain.    dont  we wish  we all  had  a  dentist  friend...
  it  got  easier,  but  never  pleasnt. 
  just  glad  i  had  very  little  hair  to  start  with  on  the  chin  and  upper  lip,  and  none on  the  bod.
  in  the  words  of  the  old  chineese  master,  "  Be  strong  grasshopper". 
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Colleen M

Ibuprofen does help, and it does get more pleasant each session as you have less hair.  Also, I'm told avoiding caffeine is a good idea and it seems to help me at least. 
When in doubt, ignore the moral judgments of anybody who engages in cannibalism.
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ameliato

Just a question for anyone who can answer. How long is it noticeable that you have had a session after it is done? is your face red for days, hours, sore, bumpy, etc?

Thank you for your responses.
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Cynobyte

I used to take a pain med for any dermal surgery like oxycodone or morphine.  Just a low dose.  Then like the others have a general anastetic like lidocaine put on it first.  If that place doesn't sell it, you can legally buy online from piercing or tatoo suppliers.   I buy in powder form from Taiwan for cheap and compound it into cold cream.  It's totally legal to buy under the fda regulations, just not resell unless you have a liscense. Just like anything, read the label because you can overdose.  It's used to slow the heart down in large doses..
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Lisa55

ameliato, Noticeable to you or to others? as there is a difference.  You will probably be a bit red for a couple of hours after, so someone who knows you will be able to tell you have been whacked around a bit and look a bit sore or sun burnt.  But unless you develop spots or are burnt then it will more than likely subside and not be noticeable to others by the next day or even within hours.

On the other hand you will feel differences for longer,  My skin feels kind of clammy or waxy for a while after a session,  some of that is actually that it feels smooth and i figured this was a) the close shave for the session coupled with b)the tops of the hairs burnt off and c) the skin being very  slightly swollen meaning its only skin felt to the touch rather than a lifetime of feeling stubble.   When it does grow/shed out a bit such that you need to shave i find that its very difficult to get a good shave for about a week, the hairs don't cut well and it feels sore to drag the razor over my skin.  Its kind of like trying to shave a couple of days growth with an old blunt razor, unconformable and ineffective.  I have also had slight Folliculitis meaning each follicle is slightly swollen which is noticeable to me in the right light or to touch but not really apparent to anyone else. So other than a bad shave none of this is likely to be noticeable to anyone who isn't close enough to know what your up to anyway.

And of course the other thing is ultimately you wont have a 5 o'clock shadow and during the process there will be some areas that are clearer than others.

But always with a caveat that everyone's skin is different so your experience may be very different to mine
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