| There was no let. They just decided to and did. |
| DS started at 14 with an electric razor. It does not affect growth or coarseness for him. |
| I mean ...my DD is 13 and uses the finishing touch on her slight mustache so I don't understand the logic of prohibiting a boy. |
| Even my 12yo likes to knockoff dark peach fuzz coming in every few days. |
My 13 yr old son uses this too! It’s such a small area that he needs to shave that this makes for sense than a big electric razor. But he knows he can use a regular razor at any time, when he wants. |
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My son started at 12. I noticed the need before he did, but let him be the one to bring it up.
He's light skinned (mixed racially Black / white) with thick black hair. He asked so I bought the supplies with him, and DH walked him through the process. He started shaving his mustache at 12 and sometime last year needed to also get his chin. Now at 14 he's also doing cheeks. He's a hairy kid, I guess. |
| As soon as the fuzz appeared. The young boys with facial hair look dirty and weird. |
| Our private requires boy to be clean-shaven, so our now college student was shaving at 14, yes. Don't think he quite needed to, but he did. |
Being very controlling and an idiot is a bad combination OP. I think you guys should pick one or, better yet, none. |
| I dislike this level of control so much. The answer is....when they want to. It's his body. Even though the whole growing back thing is a myth, even if it was true, so what? It's his body. |
Yes, it’s totally a myth that shaving makes hair come back thicker. I’ve been shaving the blond fuzz on my legs for 30 yrs and it hasn’t gotten any thicker or darker… I’d personally let him shave whenever he wants to. |