| Why not? |
|
DD has a unibrow. She is 3 so her hair is still fine and its not noticeable. She has brown hair/brows so I presume it will get more pronounced as she grows up.
Even if it were pronounced now there is no way i would do anything about it until she is older, maybe middle-school. I started needing glasses in middle school and had to beg my parents for contacts; they finally relented in 8th grade, in part bc my college age sister backed me up. |
That’s what I did for my dd. |
| Tinkle razor |
+1. These are completely painless. |
| I believe the medical term is monoeyebrosis. |
| This will be my son soon. My fear is that the hair removal will be obvious and more likely to cause teasing than the unibrow. I think there’s more wiggle room with girls to look “styled” |
This is the best response. |
Y’all are old losers to think a unibrow is a big deal.
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| My 7 year old has a unibrow. I’ve offered gently that we could remove the hair but she’s neither bothered by it nor interested so I’m not going to push her. Eventually she’ll want to and I’ll help her do it at that point |
| My toddler has light brown hair and a slight unibrow. She’s still a very cute kid. If it’s an issue when she’s old enough to ask about it or feel self conscious about it, we’ll figure out an age appropriate option. |
Also for what it’s worth, I will not pierce my daughters ears unless she asks for it. Her cosmetic and bodily decisions - anything like hair removal, ear piercing etc will be up to her at age appropriate times. |
| I wouldn't unless the kid asked. I also wonder if you'd feel the same way of the kid was a boy. |
| DD has beautiful eyebrows. Hairy baby, and a unibrow. At 8, I started to use a Tinkle to give her 2 eyebrows instead of 1. She's a much older teen now and does it herself, but it's painless. I would not wax, the skin is very sensitive. |
| A unibrow is not the fashion faux pas that you think it is. This is not the 80s/90s. OP sounds like someone who still thinks plucking your brows into a thin arch is in fashion. |