Publicité

People are only just learning what the tiny hole in nail clippers is actually for

Publicité

Publicité

And it doesn’t matter if your nails are natural or false because there is an increased probability of carrying microorganisms, which makes it hard to clean with handwashing or scrubbing.

Kaplan further warned that the bacteria can be transferred to your system ‘by scratching, nail-biting, nose-picking and finger-sucking’ and can go on to cause an infection.

In addition to explaining why we should cut our nails, there’s a little known fact about clippers themselves that’s still leaving people scratching their heads to this day — that mystery being the small hole on clippers.

Many (myself included) have long ignored this design feature, presuming that it’s not really for anything, yet it turns out that the hole is there so that the clippers can be connected to things like keychains, toiletry kits, and so on.

 

A post on Facebook has gone viral of late sharing one man’s story about how he came to learn about the purpose of the hole.

The post reads: “My mother-in-law couldn’t stop laughing when she realized I had no idea what the tiny hole in a nail clipper is for. Now I wonder… am I the only one who never knew?

“I was so embarrassed — I’d literally never thought about it before.”

While you’d possibly presume that people with ridiculously long nails are inviting gross bacteria into their lives, Kayla Newman, a nail tech based in North Carolina, insists that in years of working her clients have never had ‘nasty nails’.

“Generally people who have long nails know how to maneuver with them and keep them clean,” she said.

 

“If you’re spending upwards of $60 to get your nails done and you don’t keep them clean, that doesn’t make sense.”

I mean, she has a point.

 

For Complete Cooking STEPS Please Head On Over To Next Page Or Open button (>) and don’t forget to SHARE with your Facebook friends.

Publicité

Publicité