You die.
When a hair is pulled out, the hair follicle is disrupted and the hair falls out. The follicle may bleed briefly, but a new hair will eventually grow in its place. Repeatedly pulling out hair can lead to damage to the follicle and potentially inhibit hair growth.
Curly or straight depends on what happens down in the hair sac, which is where the hair is made. Anything you do to the hair once outside the hair sac, like dyeing or perms, won't affect the growth zone. When it grows, it'll come out like it was before the treatment.
Follicle.
no its not...!
Hair forms in a pouch-like structure below the skin called a hair follicle.
The scalp will not bleed when hair is pulled out because there are no blood vessels close to the surface of the scalp.
The shape of the hair sac, the follicle. It's what you're born with.
The root is part of hair embedded in the follicle in dermis. It has an attached smooth muscle which can contract causing the hair to stand up right. This causes the skin to form a slight bump which we call a 'goose bump'.
Because, there is follicles there and it helps with temperature control and sweating.
To help keep the scrotum warm and help with sweating.
When you pull out a hair, the root of the pulled follicle may appear sticky due to the presence of sebum, a natural oil secreted by the sebaceous glands. Sebum lubricates the hair and skin, and when a hair is pulled out, it can carry some of this sticky substance with it.
texture