Quote from: ElizabethK on September 03, 2017, 05:41:48 AM
Hi MyMichele
Can I ask you to explain a bit more of what you mean by this. I am always looking to find ways to reduce the discomfort.
Elizabeth,
I think the main problem is technicians using the wrong modality. Not every hair is the same. The thick terminal hairs need pure galvanic or blend. This takes more time for each hair, but it is more of a constant energy (and chemical reaction) being applied and hardly any pain at all.
Also remember that your technicians are human and can get tired. From my experience the times I felt pain was when they are not being careful enough putting the probe in and taking it out. You have to be very vocal with them if they are hurting you. Sometimes they need to stretch the skin to get the probe in at the right angle and then after they zap the follicle and before they remove the probe they let go of your skin which then retracts like a rubber band which in effect shoves the probe inadvertently past the point where it needs to be causing pain and skin damage.
This is also why I don't believe numbing injections are a good idea. You really have no idea what is going on. You need to be vocal with them. I know we all go in there and the technicians become our best friend. But they can always learn from you. They are the experts, but you are the expert on your own body.
I also go to a thermolysis only electrologist, but that is because I am at the point where I'm really getting the fine peach fuzz hairs, not all of them, just the ones that grow long because those are the ones that can develop back into terminals from what I can see. I did allow her to remove a few stray terminals and it was a mistake. Skin damage. I was burned. My skin turned black at the point of treatment. A dot about a millimeter wide in a few places on my upper lip.
The first electrologist was a very bad experience and she charged less than half of what the others charge. Maybe that was a sign, but according to my latest technician, she said that the first must have been manually applying the current. I would feel the zap, but it was more of a long zap. She would do this up to 4 times for each hair, which I believe is the limit. My latest said she would never go that high, but high settings are needed to kill the terminals, and most of the time it can't and it just gets half killed and then plucked. Then it grows back.
Sorry for the long winded post, but my best advice, find a blend electrologist and let them know you want galvanic. It is slower, but more effective and less pain. You know you have blend if you're holding the wet probe. That is what you want. And again, if it hurts then tell them because pain is not fun, but skin damage is even less fun.