Am I overtreating?

The following series of pictures were mostly taken today, the first one 2 days ago.

This first picture is takem 24 hours after first treatment:
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/66437553/arms.jpg

This was taken today and because there’s no magnifiction you cant see alot:
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/66437553/IMG346.jpg
These two I took through my loop to get a little closer in:
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/66437553/IMG347.jpg
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/66437553/IMG348.jpg

Treatment was 2-3 dys go at this point. It ws performed with an Apilus SM 500 with 0.20 ma for a 30 second interval( all galvanic). What has me concerned is the smallish red scabs, and it’s one reason I’ve held off until today for any further treatment. I wa pretty careful on depth, but it’s possible I went deep once or twice. I’m just loking for feedback on the skin reaction because I wasnt expecting to see smallish red scabs at this point. I’m not too horribly concerned they will pock or mark, but maybe I should be. What you see under magnification, isnt all tht visible to the naked eye, I have a 5 diopter loop.I havent treated with anything, but will use some teatree oil today

Can anyone tell me if I’m on the right track, should I be little more careful on my insertions, or is this normal for a galvonic treatment?

PS I have no idea why a couple hairs seem to have gone “nuclear” and decided to glow. Maybe I have some lint on my lens.

Scabs are normal and any red reaction on your skin is a good sign that it’s healing. 30 seconds is a long time to treat it, even though it’s on a setting of 2. Heck, when I goto town I put it on setting 7 for 5-6 seconds.

I think it’s just like it should be. Good Job!

The glow may come from a lamp on the ceiling?

I’m happy it’s not as I thought. Still quite a bit to clear but I had held off wanting to know about the skin reaction. You are probably right, there’s a double fluorescent fixture on the ceiling.

I’m still going to be careful on my insertions.The lye crust makes guging depth SO much easier.