Anonymous wrote:I am really annoyed at all the people acting as if laser is an option for everyone. It is very expensive and out of budget for most people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not try a Bellabe spring tool? You can buy it on amazon. It’s a spring that you roll over the hair and it removes it- kind of like self-threading.
+1 it's excruciatingly painful but after awhile less hair grows back, you need to use it less frequently, and you're kind of used to the pain by then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The responses here are crazy. You do not give your daughter a complex about hair of any kind unless she brings it up to you. Bringing it up to her means you think something is wrong with her.
+100 lots of vain parents here.
I understand where you are coming from, but also, how else do we learn? There are so many things my mom didn't teach me that I learned way too late, which gave me retrospective understanding about some early social issues (and hindsight humiliation).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The responses here are crazy. You do not give your daughter a complex about hair of any kind unless she brings it up to you. Bringing it up to her means you think something is wrong with her.
+100 lots of vain parents here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Try at-home dermaplaning first
Dermaplaning is just shaving plus paying more.
And gives you stubble.
Don't do anything involving a razor OP
Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. I used to wax but now I use a small tinkle razor. So much easier, quicker and pain-free!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to have my upper lip threaded regularly from the time I was a teenager, when I lived in India. When I came to the US for college my aunt and cousins told me they used a men’s razor to shave. I’ve been doing that ever since, three decades and counting.
Compare and contrast for us, PP! Which method keeps the hair away longer? threading or shaving?
. I do believe that threading is better because the regrowth is not stubbly. I learned to thread it myself and would take a few seconds to thread my upper-lip in the morning. But, once I got it lasered...it was a game changer.
Anonymous wrote:Why not try a Bellabe spring tool? You can buy it on amazon. It’s a spring that you roll over the hair and it removes it- kind of like self-threading.
Anonymous wrote:Get it lasered! Don't shave or wax. It will only get thicker. It is worth the investment.
Anonymous wrote:K have PCOS and have tried all the facial hair removal methods.
No, it doesn't go back thicker no matter the removal method-that's absurd.
The easiest method is using the battery operated face razors that look like lipstick cases. She can do it herself at home, it doesn't hurt at all, and they work great on light facial hair.
https://www.cvs.com/shop/finishing-touch-flawless-instant-and-painless-facial-hair-remover-prodid-1670014?skuId=259401&cgaa=QWxsb3dHb29nbGVUb0FjY2Vzc0NWU1BhZ2Vz&cid=ps_bea_pla&gclsrc=aw.ds&gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=21199578405&gclid=CjwKCAiAwNDMBhBfEiwAd7ti1P6UcHDV31IDeCOcmrarcDtdr0rsYW6xfMwm1AAeV8bm7Gy6T1GKihoCOPgQAvD_BwE
Anonymous wrote:My incredibly thick for a woman mustache was blonde so I did electrolysis. Painful but worth it. Laser can grow back in some cases FYI.