Reasons for removing hair
Hair removal has been
practiced for centuries in almost all human cultures. The
methods used vary among times and regions, but shaving is
the most common method.
Removal of hair for
medical reasons
Patients' body hair was
once shaved before surgery for reasons of hygiene;
however, this turned out to be counter-productive, and as
a result patients are no longer shaved in many hospitals.
The shaving of hair has
sometimes been used in attempts to eradicate lice or to
minimize body odor due to accumulation of odor causing
micro-organisms in hair. Some people find it medically
necessary to remove ingrown eyelashes.
Removal of hair for
social, cultural, or sexual reasons
Hair is normally removed
for social and sexual reasons related to the social role
of hair in human society. Many cultures have an aesthetic
"ideal" amount of hair for males and females. People whose
hair violates such standards may experience real or
perceived problems with social acceptance.
Many men in Western
cultures shave their facial hair, to the point that only a
minority of men has a beard. This is in spite of the fact
that facial hair grows fast and has to be shaved daily to
achieve a clean-shaven or hairless look. Some men do not
grow beards simply because they cannot grow a "full"
beard.
What qualifies as a "full" beard varies from man to man,
but it usually means one that isn't blotchy (spots with
little or no beard hair). There is also the problem of the
beard being a different color than the scalp hair and
looking odd in an undesirable way. Still other beards grow
out in such a way as to look gnarly or growing in all
directions thus not enabling the beard to have a groomed
look.
Finally, some men have beards that are too coarse for
their facial skin and thus make it itch all the time. For
any single or combination of these reasons, many men do
not grow a beard and thus go clean-shaven instead, though
they may occasionally try growing a beard from time to
time to see if things have changed for the positive.
In some cultures (e.g.
Sikhs), men cannot shave or otherwise remove their hair.
In other cultures, men or women may not be allowed to cut
their hair.
In Western culture, many
women shave their body hair in the belief that body hair
is not feminine (see gender role), or because they think
it makes them look ugly. Many women in America and Japan
shave off all their pubic hair in hopes of looking more
youthful thus more attractive to their sexual mate and/or
in the desire to simply look and feel younger themselves.
By shaving off graying, thinning, and/or brittle hair,
they get rid of the aging evidence. But it isn't just
middle-age women that do so. With youth being so prized in
American and Japanese cultures, young women do so to make
themselves appear even more youthful.
The practice though is most commonly done by upper-class
women in these two countries and a usual practice is to
make a couple of trips to health spas that will use lasers
or electrolysis to permanently remove all the pubic hair
to save future labor by them.
In some US cities (such as Dallas), parents give this as
part of their high school graduation present to their
daughters. It being given along with paying for breast
implants to make their daughters more attractive when
husband-hunting on college campuses.
Many women of African descent commonly shave all their
groin pubic hair due to its common coarse nature to reduce
irritation of their partner's skin due to rapid repeated
rubbing that takes place during sexual intercourse.
Some men shave their heads,
either as a fashion statement or to cover up male pattern
baldness. A very few women also shave their heads for
fashion reasons or to make a social political statement.
Places on the body where
hair is often removed
Hair grows on most areas of
the human body, except for the palms of the hands and the
feet, but hair is most noticeable in most people in a
small number of areas that are most commonly waxed,
trimmed, plucked, or shaved:
- Facial hair
- Head hair
- Eyebrows
- Eyelashes
- Pubic hair
- Leg hair
- Armpit hair
Hair removal methods
Many products on the market
have proven fraudulent. Many other products exaggerate the
results.
Permanent
Permanent hair removal
involves several imperfect options. A number of methods
have been developed that use chemicals, energy of varying
types, or a combination to target the areas that regulate
hair growth. Permanently destroying these areas while
sparing surrounding tissue is a difficult challenge.
Permanent hair removal for
most
Permanent hair reduction
for some
- Laser
- Flashlamp (also called
Intense Pulsed Light or IPL)
Lasting hair inhibition for
many (requires continuous use)
- Prescription oral
medications
- A new method of
epilation is to use enzymes that inhibit the development
of new hair cells. Hair growth will become less and less
until it finally stops, normal depilation/epilation will
be performed during that time. Products include the
prescription drug Vaniqa (active ingredient eflornithine
hydrochloride inhibiting the enzyme ornithine
decarboxylase) - effective for 46% of women.
Temporary Solutions
Depilation
lasting several hours to several days can be achieved by:
- Shaving or trimming
(manually or with electric shavers)
- Depilatories (creams or
"shaving powders" which chemically dissolve hair)
- Friction (rough surfaces
used to buff away hair)
Epilation lasting
several days to several weeks can be achieved by:
- Waxing (a hot or cold
layer is applied and then removed with porous strips)
- Plucking (hairs are
plucked, or pulled out, with tweezers)
- Sugaring (similar to
waxing, but with a sticky paste)
- Threading (also called
fatlah or khite, in which a twisted thread
catches hairs as it's rolled across the skin)
- Rotary epilators
(devices which rapidly grasp hairs and pull them out by
the root)
Some methods are still in
the experimental stage or have been banned for most uses
due to adverse effects.
- X-ray (banned in the
United States)
- Photodynamic therapy
(experimental)
Doubtful methods
Many methods have been
proposed or sold over the years without published clinical
proof they can work as claimed.
- Electric tweezers
- "Transdermal
electrolysis"
- "Transcutaneous hair
removal"
- Photoepilators
- Microwaves
- Foods and Dietary
supplements
- Nonprescription topical
preparations (also called "hair inhibitors," "hair
retardants," or "hair growth inhibitors")
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