Possibly. Or they could have a mental condition they do not know about. If you think someone is cutting themselves, get help. NEVER cut yourself, because you could kill yourself if doing it wrong.
Because as our hair grows out from the folicle each strand becomes dead hair. There is no pain involved in cutting our hair.
It is my understanding that people do it because the self inflicted pain distracts them from the emotional pain they are feeling. First you must address your emotional pain. Find out why you are cutting. What is it that you do not want to feel, what pain are you trying to cover up? Then you must address that pain, eliminate that stress from your life. Cutting is an addiction as well. You have to want to stop in order to stop. You just stop doing it, use your will power, be strong. But if you are a cutter you probably need professional help, not particularly to stop cutting but to address the deep emotional pain that you are feeling.
hair, callus and nails
Bleeding, pain and possibly a trip to the hospital.
You don't. Cutting usually indicates some sort of emotional problem, and you really should talk to a mental health professional about it. Remember, cutting can lead to infections and scars, as well as pain!
Its the dead skin
Thomas Cutter in 1789. They were the ones who wanted to let out their anger and pain out. So they inflicted pain on themselves.
The pain of betrayal is sharp and deep, like a knife cutting through trust and emotions.
No, cutting your hair should not hurt if done properly with sharp scissors or clippers. If you experience pain while cutting your hair, you may be cutting too closely to the skin or pulling on the hair too forcefully.
Chickens may feel pain during the cutting? It suffers until the blood has finally gone.
Well, there may be other meanings to this term but in some cases it refers to a group of people cutting their own bodies as a way to escape emotional pain or for other reasons. if you believe this is the definition look up more information by searching; cutting, group cutting, or cutting parties.
In a 1990 study reported in the journal Pain, nurses were found to overestimate the severity of pain in patients with severe burns. In most other studies, nurses and physicians ascribe a lower pain severity than do patients.