Here is my experience keeping it stupid simple. I have found that first and foremost your edge is everything. If it isn't perfect for your face it won't shave well. Second is your technique. Third is your stropping.
My beard grows back quickly so I always have a shadow at the end of the day and I am Italian decent. My skin is however rather sensitive and my goatee area is very thick so u have a reference. since you are not honing I will skip to technique and stropping. If Lynn sharpened your blade we can assume it will come perfect. You can call him personally by the way and he will walk you through the honing later.
Technique: put hot water in the shower on your face for a couple minutes to open the scales on your whiskers. Use a good quality soap and learn to lather properly. The lather should have plenty of water but not runny. I often add a bit of water when lathering between passes. When rinsing the blade if the lather doesn't come off easily it's too thick.
Try to keep the spine nearly touching your face with very little pressure. The closer to your face the spine the smoother the shave but a little less efficient so do quicker shorter strokes. Raising the spine will cause more irritation one reason why full hollows allows more comfort for beginners (my opinion)If you try this with quarter or full wedge the blade will stick to your face a little and these blades may force a slight more aggressive angle. If the quarter hollow is not honed and stripped perfectly it ,may be more irritating. If you don't put any pressure the blade should glide easily this way but focus on keeping the blade spine close to the skin. The amount of passes is up to you but I would just do one pass so you get the hang of how it should feel freshly honed. Should glide right through with little resistance but extremely comfortable more than a de wtg. I do three traditional passes with a water only light pass last on trouble areas and I get a comfortable bbs shave. Every pass is more comfortable than a de and I shave every day. Once you can strop properly and the edge does not feel deteriorated for your next shave try a second pass probable xtg and lastly try atg.
Stropping: I use SRD premium Latigo with SRD linen. After every shave I will do 45 literally weight of the blade quick passes post shave on linen to return keenness. I pull the linen taught with no slack. I found the linen acts as an extremely fine hone from the cellulose content and convects the edge geometry to keep the edge comfortable. You just want to barely catch the edge with the linen and it should not feel rough or vibrate at all down the linen. I follow up on the leather ,with slightly less taughtness allowing a slight slack just shy of taught and stop with pressure maybe 5 pounds and do 60 to 100 passes and this will fine tune the edge smoothing it out further and adds a coat of oil to the blade. It should feel resistance here but extremely smooth and at about 60-100 passes the resistance should start to go away a bit. This is when the blade is done. Of course focus on not lifting that spine but its harder to mess up the edge on leather. If you put pressure on the linen or slack the linen you risk deteriorating the edge or making the razor too aggressive and making it less comfort and too keen. This can usually be resolved by shaving one pass and restropping the way I stated. I experimented with not stropping, less stropping post shave etc. but there is no difference fully stropping post shave and putting the blade away shave ready once more. If you do a small post stropping and then preshave stropping again you risk too keen an edge. I like to rule out variables as much as possible. I hone up to a 20k edge from the suehiro and I found if I slack the edge and put pressure on linen I rip the delicate edge off and dull the blade a bit frustrating me to no end.
Every strop is different and everyone's face is different and this works for me. I would adjust up or down but remember the pressure rules and you should be fine. The rules for stropping change a bit for Jnat edges. so lately to keep it simple and only been shaving off synthetics. Later when you hone pm me and I will give you a detailed start on how to get great edges with my theories on how it's done.
The last thing to touch the edge is what determines the next shave experience. The stropping is in some ways more important than the last stone you used to get that edge. This is why blades tend to get smoother after a couple of shaves (for novice honing) as your strop fine tunes the edge past how you honed it in the first place. I get my blades convexed as quickly as possible so I get the smoothest comfortable edges from my stropping and I haven't had to touch stones for a long time. No pastes for me.
I hope this helps!