FWIW there is the item that it can be healthy when one considers that lice and crabs are losing their natural habitat.
I remember reading other articles on how biologists are using the disappearance and appearance of the types of lice as markers for humans developing hairlessness and how changes in grooming behavior like shaving is affecting the evolution of parasites and humans.
Anecdotal evidence. I stopped shaving 50 years ago and I’m still alive. So there.
I hated shaving and always wound up with bloody cuts (not microcuts). I bought the best blades available then and used them only once. Electric razors were brutal. When I started going to a barber for a beard trim, he complained that my beard hairs were like little wires and left his scissors dull. The thought of shaving my pubic area gives me the willies.
Given that I can consciously smell the B.O. of someone fully clothed the concept that loosely dressed Paleolithic humans could subconsciously respond to chemical triggers wafting from each others’ pubic areas and armpits when close to each other seems reasonable. Not proof it occured or occurs mind you.
Ok, fine. The thrust of my original comment was not that exfoliation is healthy; I honestly don’t knowmuch about it. The gist of my comment was simply that shaving does exfoliate the skin. I always just kind of assumed it was a good thing. :o
I had a dermatologist (with a beard) who told me that shaving is bad for the skin on the face. He did not elaborate as to why. I have been shaving for over 40 years and my skin looks pretty normal.
Electric razor instructions tell you it takes a couple of weeks before you get the best shave after switching from a regular blade. I have read this has to do with scar tissue healing. I do not have any firsthand knowledge of whether shaving with a blade in fact creates scar tissue, or that it would heal in two weeks.
Uh, yeah! Where do you think a lot of your household dust comes from? Our bodies are constantly shedding dead skin cells. One estimate is that it takes roughly 27 days for us to shed a complete layer of skin.
Shaving technology – despite marketers trying to repackage it in a million different ways over the past century – hasn’t really progressed beyond scraping your skin with a sharp rock. I don’t think it’s significantly dangerous, but I can’t imagine it’s all that good for you either. I can imagine a dermatologist being mildly opposed to unnecessary self-inflicted procedures which cause tiny cuts at best and large, bleeding ones at worst.
That said, despite my personal belief that shaving is unnecessary and often uncomfortable, I wouldn’t go so far as to call it unhealthy. “Bad for your skin”? In the same way winter dryness is. Nothing you can’t manage with some topical ointments, but not good for you, either. But I never understood what exfoliation was all about either.
There must be billions of male beard shaves per day with no medical consequences, so may we please drop them completely from the discussion? (I caught the part about Blacks being predisposed to ingrown hairs, but I have by now looked at millions of male Black faces from all over the world in person and in the media, and nowhere near 1% have had full beards, so I think the sample is representative).
As for female leg and pssy shaves they have been going on to the tune of billions too (maybe not per day, but how about per year?) since they became fashionable (relatively recently for the pssy), and likewise with the disappearingly infrequent medicals.
That tells me its OK to shave, shave and shave away, most anywhere you wanna shave, as long as you are not ridiculously careless about it.
As a man who’s had his back Naired and waxed a time or two (wife was embarrassed about my luxurious pelt when we were going tubing), I’ll say that compared to either of those processes, shaving sure seems like it’s less traumatic.