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Scientifically Proven Side Effects A Man Gets Waxing Their Chest

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Beeswax is amazing stuff. It's produced by honeybees to form the combs where both honey and life are stored in the hive, and it's also used in a variety of human products including hair removal. But while wax is great for helping you look less like a werewolf, there are also some potential side effects you should think about before deciding whether or not to manscape your chest.

It's taken a hot minute for humanity to understand those side effects, though. Some sources date the practice of using wax for hair removal as far back as the ancient Egyptians over 3,000 years ago. The Romans used it too, and throughout history, whenever a society decides less body hair is more attractive, beeswax suddenly makes a comeback.

Of course, in many societies, hair removal for women has been a controversial beauty standard for many years. Today, you can even get many hair removal products for women that don't include actual wax at all, while others mix it with resins or other agents to help soothe the skin and make the process easier and hopefully less painful.

Men's hair removal techniques, however, have tended to lag behind, so when a fad like waxing a man's chest comes along, it tends to rely on the old standby: using wax to violently rip those hairs out. No nubs, no stubs; out by the roots in one fell swoop. Commonly, a compound is warmed, applied to the area to be denuded, allowed to harden, and then removed, taking with it the unwanted hair.

But since those hairs are eventually going to come back, men have to ask whether or not it's worth the pain and the potential side effects. Because no matter what body part you're waxing, there are consequences to trying to foil Mother Nature.

First, you're likely to get redness and skin irritation following a waxing, so applying an antiseptic cream afterwards is a good idea. Even so, though, there are risks of infection. The most common type is called folliculitis, which The Mayo Clinic describes as, quote, "a common skin condition in which the hair follicles become inflamed." Left untreated, they tell us, the condition can turn into "nonhealing, crusty sores." Somehow, that sounds a lot less appealing than just being hairy! Keep watching the video to see the scientifically proven side effects a man gets waxing their chest.

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