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JackRiddler wrote:On the body-sculpting front, it's gotten very hard to stand out - most everyone still comes with the same set of limbs and organs, so what's left to wear or not to wear, to pierce or tattoo, to enhance or extend, train or bloat or amputate? (Ha, I remember my shock when I saw someone in my high school had three earrings on one ear! And these were just on the lower lobe, mind you.)
Avalon wrote:From what I hear, Brazilian waxes are starting to be the norm for a wide range of women (and increasingly men too), with an active distaste and condemnation for pubic hair expressed.
JackRiddler wrote:Avalon wrote:From what I hear, Brazilian waxes are starting to be the norm for a wide range of women (and increasingly men too), with an active distaste and condemnation for pubic hair expressed.
Yes to all you say. A few times I've wanted to note the war on pubic hair in particular, except it felt awkward to talk about here. I think it's a kind of unconscious mass self-hatred, also paradoxical: Stripping away one's sexual characteristics (and individuality) so as to be more sexy? Makes me want to puke. It's a kind of social anti-sexual conformity marketed as sexual. Or else a way to keep everyone disgusted with their own bodies. And let's not even get into the long-ago over war on armpits.
Simulist wrote:Here's an alternate opinion: ridding ones self of body hair can also be for the purposes of showing off ones body more completely -- without extraneous hair to block the view.
Viewed from that perspective, this wouldn't be due to a "disgust" with ones body at all, rather admiration.
barracuda wrote:My question would be, why is it that so many millenialist articles like this one are popular now? Is it simply a trend of the early twenty-teens?
JackRiddler wrote:Simulist wrote:Here's an alternate opinion: ridding ones self of body hair can also be for the purposes of showing off ones body more completely -- without extraneous hair to block the view.
Viewed from that perspective, this wouldn't be due to a "disgust" with ones body at all, rather admiration.
The hair is the view, it should be shown off (and otherwise sensed!) and is as admirable as any other part. And lush. And thrilling. In my discussions on this unfortunate practice with (generally female) armpit exfoliators and their (generally male) supporters, their emphasis is always on how the hair is disgusting, not how the resulting bare view is prettier.
Anyway, at times I felt I needed spiritual purging, I've shaved everything off. (If you're as hairy as me you really regret it about an hour in and still more than half to go.)
JackRiddler wrote:In my discussions on this unfortunate practice with (generally female) armpit exfoliators and their (generally male) supporters, their emphasis is always on how the hair is disgusting, not how the resulting bare view is prettier.
Simulist wrote:Oh and by the way...JackRiddler wrote:In my discussions on this unfortunate practice with (generally female) armpit exfoliators and their (generally male) supporters, their emphasis is always on how the hair is disgusting, not how the resulting bare view is prettier.
After this, it won't be "always" anymore.
Simulist wrote:"Bah" right back at you.
Hair can be pretty -- on the right guy (as the second guy demonstrates). But that first guy looks... well, nasty.
But if you think that looks nice, then by all means... enjoy.
JackRiddler wrote:Simulist wrote:"Bah" right back at you.
Hair can be pretty -- on the right guy (as the second guy demonstrates). But that first guy looks... well, nasty.
But if you think that looks nice, then by all means... enjoy.
I'm just a nature boy, you know!
82_28 wrote:I made some comment and was agreed with by others here awhile back, that you cannot see any "progress" in fashion any longer. For the life of me, I cannot remember what thread it was. Anyways, enjoy. Good and poignant article here.
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