Your razor is going dull.
Yes. It will usually happen with a mishap of shaving. Always shave with the grain.
The appropriate release slope can avoid the product pulling hair (pulling flowers). Smooth surface of the mold slope should be ≥ 0.5 degrees, fine grain (sand surface) surface is greater than 1 degree, coarse grain surface is greater than 1.5 degrees.
I think anyone can get cancer, but pulling our hair does not cause it.
No. It should not have any grain in it.
You want to shave with the grain/direction of growth. For a closer shave you can go against if you know the areas on yourself well enough because they can become irritated, bumpy, and itchy after this.
It could be the way that you are shaving. Depending on the area, you want to shave with the grain versus shaving against the grain. You may not get the closest shave, but this should help relieve some irritation. Also make sure to exfoliate the area before to help lift the hairs. The hair that gets shave is left with a blunt cut, making it easier for it to grow back into the skin. Try these options and see if they work for you. Good luck!
That is razor burn, which usually means your shaving too hard, going against the grain or that body part is not used to being shaved.
50% A persons total grain serving consumption a day should be 50% whole-grain.
You should consume a percentage of 50% whole-grain for the entire day.
A horse should be fed mainly hay, and only a little little bit of grain a day.Try a cup or less of grain a day.
You should sand along the grain because if you sand across it, the texture of the wood becomes rough and it becomes split-ends
With the grain. A cross cut saw is for across the grain. A rip saw should have bigger teeth.