Hmm. I’m glad to hear this thread. The previous appointment, my electrolysis lady accidentally nicked the mole on my upper lip with a razor (they have to dry shave the area first). Now I like her, and I did a lot of research on her, so I am not inclined to switch, but I was a little concerned. I’m glad it didn’t just happen to me.
Anyway it worked out in the long run. It bled and bled and bled…and then healed with no problem, and now, it’s smaller. I actually like it better now.
A joking description of getting a haircut (for typical men’s styles) is to get one’s ears lowered, as evidenced by the space now visible between the tops of the ears and the hairline around them. That should have been “ear lower-er” rather than “ear-lengthener.”
I have a few little red bumps and cut one open after noticing it was getting a little bigger each day (presumably filling with blood). Now I have a tiny coffee stain there.
The last time I went to a dermatologist, she told me that skin-tag type moles are almost never cancerous. It’s the flat asymmetrical bleeding multicolored ones that you have to watch out for, and I do.
A benefit of having a dermatologist do it is he or she will send it to a lab to be analyzed. Also, they tend to have training in these types of things so quite often they do it better than you might.
I don’t know where the village is, but maybe the barber is old-school, and fighting back against the medical profession horning in on the surgery racket.
Urgent care center. I had a weird mole on the side of my temple that had changed but I hadn’t realized it until a hair cutter mentioned it. At the urgent care center they not only removed it (pain-free) but biopsied it. Cost me maybe $35.