Anonymous wrote:Or, "in this family, we leave our bodies as they are. Some families shave hair from parts of their bodies, and some don't. Here's soap and deodorant, and here's how to use it."
Anonymous wrote:Stop bringing it up to her. Some people let their armpit hair grow. If it doesn't bother her, let her be. She should shave IF she wants, WHEN she wants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's rather a lot of hand-wringing about perfectly mundane things in this thread. My DS started growing armpit hair at 11. DH comes from a culture where body hair removal is normal. He told DS - in our family, men do not have armpit hair. Here's a razor and a deodorant. Do this every few days. And then he checked for a few months to remind him. End of story. No tantrums about body image, external forces, pressures, therapy and other American nonsense. You have armpit hair now, take care of it, here's how. The end.
This is how it was with my daughter, too.
Fairly nonchalant. She is 12 and I noticed some wispy underarm hair recently when she was raising her arms to yawn or stretch. I said, “Oh, you need to start shaving under her arms.” Showed her where the razor was, told her to do it in the shower every few days to stay on top of it. Done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's rather a lot of hand-wringing about perfectly mundane things in this thread. My DS started growing armpit hair at 11. DH comes from a culture where body hair removal is normal. He told DS - in our family, men do not have armpit hair. Here's a razor and a deodorant. Do this every few days. And then he checked for a few months to remind him. End of story. No tantrums about body image, external forces, pressures, therapy and other American nonsense. You have armpit hair now, take care of it, here's how. The end.
This is how it was with my daughter, too.
Fairly nonchalant. She is 12 and I noticed some wispy underarm hair recently when she was raising her arms to yawn or stretch. I said, “Oh, you need to start shaving under her arms.” Showed her where the razor was, told her to do it in the shower every few days to stay on top of it. Done.
Anonymous wrote:OP, my DD is 9, and had hair. Also getting pubic hair, which is freaking me out cuz she’s still my baby! Anyhow, she brought it up to me once, like hey mom look at this. I think I told her that some girls shave it but she didn’t have to if she didn’t want to. She didn’t say anything else right away, but last night she was in the shower and called me in. She wanted to show me her armpits; I took my razor and just said let’s take care of that. Two seconds and it was over. No questions, no comment.
FYI, my sister got her period just after she turned 10. It happens.
Anonymous wrote:There's rather a lot of hand-wringing about perfectly mundane things in this thread. My DS started growing armpit hair at 11. DH comes from a culture where body hair removal is normal. He told DS - in our family, men do not have armpit hair. Here's a razor and a deodorant. Do this every few days. And then he checked for a few months to remind him. End of story. No tantrums about body image, external forces, pressures, therapy and other American nonsense. You have armpit hair now, take care of it, here's how. The end.