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I ask because (for example) after waxing/plucking my eyebrows over and over, I notice that each time it grows back in, it's slightly thicker and longer than the last time I plucked? Nothing too dramatic, but enough to show a difference. Can this apply to the hairs on our heads?
You know, slightly off-topic but I've always wondered about this old wives' tale about the hair growing in thicker and longer each time. I tend to slack on shaving my legsbut after like a month or 2 I notice I just have that half-inch of hair fuzz on my leg, whereas my SO has long curly leg hairs that are probably over 1.5-2 inches if I were to stretch them out and measure.
My eyebrows also don't continue to grow back thicker and longer. If I let them fill all the way back in, they look exactly like they did in my high school senior pics (before I started shaping them). I'm not quite brave enough to find out if this applies to my armpitsI'd rather keep those shaved.
It does lead me to wonder if I'm not a bit of an oddity? It seems a lot of women complain that their hair always grows back thicker and longer when they shave/wax/pluck, but mine doesn't...
On LL's OT, I believe that when you wax or pluck the hair grows back thinner, or appears to do so. When you shave, the hair appears thicker.Methinks it's because instead of having a tapering end, new hair has got a blunt end that appears wide when you shave and that also feels rough. Waxing/plucking leads to new hairs that seem thinner and feel softer, but that could be because they don't have the blunt end created by shaving but have a pointy thinner end.
That's what I think anyway.