This was when it first started getting really bad. You can see the cracks running through the hardened skin where if I stretched much more the blood would rupture out.Shortly after the skin started coming off. When that peeled off, my skin was so dehydrated that I had to shower every five minutes to keep my skin from literally splitting apart. The skin looked nothing like normal skin, because it wasn't. It was the bottom layer of skin that's not supposed to be exposed.Then it started healing. Parts that were less burned healed faster, and parts that were more burned healed more slowly. You can see which part was which just about by the parts that were tan still covering damaged skin, and the pale parts being brand new healed skin.
Is that your clavicle...? It looks like you could fill that with water
It must have been the way I was turning my head, but yeah it is.
hia slicksilver. I recommend you use something like moisturizer to keep your skin hydrated. But ofc I'm no doctor
do not google this
Yep! That's exactly what helped me. Super heavy duty moisturizer applied liberally a few times an hour, then vaseline when going out or going to sleep to keep the moisture in.
did you just walk up to someone and say, "hey, you look like someone can we take a picture"
Fifth and sixth degree burns are most often diagnosed during an autopsy. The damage goes all the way to the bone and everything between the skin and the bone is destroyed. It is unlikely that a person would survive this type of injury but if a miracle occurred then amputation of the affected area would be necessary..