What Do You Know About Your Nails?
First things first, do you even know what your
fingernails are made of? Our fingernails and toenails are made up of a protein
called keratin, which is essentially just a bunch of dead cells. Keratin is
also found in our hair, scientifically speaking, our nails are actually just
modified hair which is quite strange if you stop to think about it. The reason
cutting our nails and hair doesn't hurt is because the cells are dead, bird
feathers and horse hooves are also made up of keratin.
I'm sure you've heard the myth about how our
nails keep growing even after death? Yeah, that isn't true. They can't keep
growing because they're dead, and dead cells on a dead body aren't going to
keep them growing! The reason this myth became so popular is that when we die,
the skin around our nails shrinks, which gives the illusion of growing nails.
Bet you didn't know this, fingernails grow
more quickly than toenails AND men's nails grow faster than women's! But
women's nail growth trumps men during pregnancy, most people believe that women
are able to grow such long and luscious hair and nails during pregnancy due to
pre-natal vitamins but that's not actually true. It's all thanks to the
hormones.
Typing or excessive movement to the tips of
the fingers doesn't necessarily guarantee healthy long nails but it can help
expedite them. The more movement and tapping brought to your fingertips the
better the blood flow, which can help you increase the speed at which you grow
your nails. But beware! The more movement and tapping you put on your nails,
the more at risk for damage and breaking! Which could set you back two more
steps than the one you took.
Lastly, fingernails have no feeling. That's
right no nerve endings at all, now I'm sure you're sitting there thinking but
wait, I've felt something once or twice before I swear it! Hang nails are the
worst! And have you tried pulling your hang nail off? When I do that I feel
that my whole finger is in flames! Fingernails extend deep beneath the skin of
the cuticle, and the nerves around the cuticle. Our brains intergrade the
sensation of force from the tips of the fingernails and cuticle as a complex
and enhanced perception of pressure which is why it might seem like our nails
are covered in nerve endings, but they're not!
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