Monday, January 18, 2010

After a while does repetitive waxing cause the hair to not grow back?

ive heard after a while it thins out, but is it possible for the hair to not grow back at all?After a while does repetitive waxing cause the hair to not grow back?
It is poss. but don't expect it overnight. It takes years of reg. waxing to thin the hair out...and more years before it stops growing completely. The more times you pull a hair out including the root...the better a chance that it will not grow back.After a while does repetitive waxing cause the hair to not grow back?
I haven't seen this happen myself at all, I wonder if it's wishful thinking in action... or is my hair just darn stubborn? I don't know.
It may slow down, but I don't belive it will ever stop growing back.
i think it is, but it takes a loooong time
no, it's just finer, and takes longer, will always grow back.





laser is the only way it won't
I've heard that. Can't say that I've seen any reason to believe it personally though.
yes
if you want to remove it permanently try electronalises. my mother-in-law has been waxing 20 years %26amp; her legs still get really hairy.
I have also heard that but I don't believe that.
Well, i can only speak for myself and say that the areas that i used to pluck hair from off my legs (don't ask, it was addictive!) have not grown back, and those areas i would pluck the hair from off my legs, i plucked for about a year in all.





But i do know some women who have waxed their face and they have had their fine facial hair grow back stronger and darker...AVOID THE FACE!
yes but it takes like 20 years or something crazy like that, even then there is a chance it will still grow back
Yes, this is true. And less hair growing back is what causes hair to ';thin out.';





This is based on personal experience, using a device that is equivalent to what waxing does (i.e., pulls out the hair).





I've used the Emjoi Gently Gold Caress for years now, and the hair on my legs is sparse now (as opposed to almost furry).





(I've shaved, had waxing, used depilatory creams, etc., but I really like this device. It's like 32 tweezes per second. Hair grows back softly, like with waxing, not scratchy like with shaving. Takes less time than shaving or waxing.)
It is true that repetitive waxing or plucking - anything that rips the hair out by the hair shaft - can cause some of the individual hairs to eventually stop growing back. But we are talking years of waxing. For example, it took about 15 years of plucking the stray hairs between my eyebrows before they thinned out enough that I could get by with just doing a bit of plucking once a week or so.


I don't know that you would ever get to a point where no hair grew in the area you were waxing at all. But yes, it should thin after a while.
  • facial moisturizer
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