Plentyoffish dating forums are a place to meet singles and get dating advice or share dating experiences etc. Hopefully you will all have fun meeting singles and try out this online dating thing... Remember that we are the largest free online dating service, so you will never have to pay a dime to meet your soulmate.
     
Show ALL Forums  > Sex and Dating  > Shaving = Pedophilia?      Home login  
 AUTHOR
 --Zen--
Joined: 6/29/2011
Msg: 226
Shaving = Pedophilia?Page 10 of 15    (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15)

biologically speaking the fur is only there for person's smell to be kept.

well at least someone knows true prepuce of pubes (yeah it is a pun)
Same effect can be achieved with 'unsanitary underwear' ergo perfectly explaining pantie fetish. Pheromones are genetic compatibility drive and I believe if we give in to our primal instincts it would alleviate few social problems. Even though scientifically sound I can not imagine exchanging underwear on a first date
 musical_turtle
Joined: 3/11/2011
Msg: 227
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 10/6/2011 3:35:25 PM
I think maybe the reason might sound a bit...extreme.
However, I think you need to respect her point of view.
If she said 'No' the first time, why 'encourage' her?
If she doesn't want to shave...then she doesn't have to. At the same time, you're not obligated to go down on her either...if you don't want to, and you shouldn't.
If she says anything about that, then let her know...that your preference to go down on a woman is for her to be shaved down there.
 its_me_J
Joined: 1/1/2011
Msg: 228
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 10/6/2011 5:22:01 PM

I don't want to go down on a chick just to meet face to face with a don king esque pants hamster


funniest visual I have ever read...
 Pingshooter
Joined: 3/15/2009
Msg: 229
view profile
History
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 10/7/2011 2:58:12 AM


I don't want to go down on a chick just to meet face to face with a don king esque pants hamster



funniest visual I have ever read...


As I sit here..feeding a carrot to Tina, my granddaughters DonKing furred Guinea Pig..yes, that is quite funny..
 Secondhand_Lion
Joined: 11/10/2008
Msg: 230
view profile
History
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 10/7/2011 5:02:38 PM
Well, lets see...in 99.99999% of human history, we have been just fine with our pubic hair. Now, I doubt I'll get an argument from anyone who's been around awhile, that the general public has become substantially dumber in the last two decades. That's about the same time frame that playing with your asses and a razor became in vogue. All that tells me is....while shaving may not necessarily equal pedophilia, it shows strong evidence of equaling dumb azz.


When are the prizes given out around here for the popularity contest?.....I just know I'm a shoe in.
 SeaCatcher
Joined: 9/11/2011
Msg: 231
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 10/7/2011 8:02:17 PM
Guys have said this to me to get me to shave. I just say, "take me as I am or go somewhere else." I have no interest in removing hair from my genitals and don't like men to do it either.
 1234deleted1234
Joined: 10/8/2009
Msg: 232
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 10/7/2011 8:22:08 PM
I prefer the desert to the jungle...too many things hide in the brush!
 daylightkris
Joined: 8/25/2011
Msg: 233
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 10/7/2011 9:22:05 PM
I know that it can be uncomfortable when the hair grows back in if you do not have the time to do the upkeep. I have been shaving down there since I moved out of my parents home. I enjoy the fact that I can go commando and not worry about my levi’s pulling my hair. When I first started I just used a pair of scissors and trimmed because of the stigma, porn stars shave not good girls. You may just need to appeal to her intellectual side and start slow make it part of your love making. It can be erotic to have assistance with your grooming.
 WildThingCO
Joined: 3/1/2009
Msg: 234
view profile
History
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 10/7/2011 9:24:33 PM
I once mentioned it to a gal I was dating... and her response was priceless... she said "Well, it's attached me, I'm not attached to it."
 IDontHeartU
Joined: 7/2/2011
Msg: 235
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 10/7/2011 9:34:49 PM
Lmoa! What kind of Doctor do you have? Since when is not shaving = health issues? Shaving is a preference NOT a health issue. If a women take good care of herself there should never be any medical problem caused by her having hair on her vagina. Now for the actual question...This is not just about u Mister. Its also about her preference. Try meeting up in the middle by asking her to groom it shorter maybe. Its called compromise. If not ... maybe there is something else going on. Maybe she has suffered some kind of trama in her life wich led her to be closed on that subject. That is just an example here Im not saying thats what it is but maybe something happemennd to her in her past that makes her react that way about it or she just simply dont like it.
 IDontHeartU
Joined: 7/2/2011
Msg: 236
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 10/7/2011 9:36:48 PM
That was a reply to " bittersweetkiss ".
 ed49601
Joined: 9/26/2007
Msg: 237
view profile
History
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 11/25/2011 8:00:43 PM
A girlfriend I had when I lived in New Mexico was 5'2 and 90 pounds soaking wet. She shaved one time and she looked like a 10 year old girl. It was a total arousal killer. I let her know and she promptly grew back a nice landing strip. for her, it was not a good look.
 HoldingHands27
Joined: 12/16/2009
Msg: 238
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 11/25/2011 8:26:12 PM
Pedophilia? No Way!!
It's just plain Sexxy!!
Especially when you let your partner do the shaving!!
A nice 1" wide Landing Strip!
 free4all131220
Joined: 10/28/2011
Msg: 239
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 11/25/2011 9:50:29 PM
and the only thing thats floppin in here are those saggy ass titties of yours...

I thought it was funny.. and thats all that really matters.






Glad you're content with that. I feel the same way about my beloved titties


yew4ics- I've seen your profile picture many times and I'm confident that you don't have "saggy floppy" titties. Just my opinion LOL
 Sakfak
Joined: 7/17/2011
Msg: 240
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 11/25/2011 10:37:47 PM
There is a way around this if she wants to keep her pubes for her mental well-being but you want to be able to pleasure her thoroughly without the pubes in your teeth.

Just tell her to keep everything on the front and take care of the hair on her lips and cloes to her clitoris. That way she still has a wonderful patch of pubes for her to look at and be proud of and you don't have to pick the hairs off of your tongue.
 soulsmilin
Joined: 4/15/2007
Msg: 241
view profile
History
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 11/26/2011 10:34:38 AM
Personally buzz cut on a number one is pretty close, shaving does itch, ingrowing hairs and so spots maybe that's why, or that she feels like a young girl, without any hair down there

Why not buy her a shaver and ask if you can shave her, start on a number two, she if she feels comfortable with it if so try a one, short and sweet, pleases you both
 The_Grey_Fringe
Joined: 11/11/2011
Msg: 242
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 11/27/2011 5:19:27 PM
Nobody likes going down on a tumbleweed!!
 1234deleted1234
Joined: 10/8/2009
Msg: 243
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 11/27/2011 5:49:32 PM
Well, lets see...in 99.99999% of human history, we have been just fine with our pubic hair.


30,000 B.C.: Prehistoric man allegedly used flint razors to shave at this time. However, the flint would dull quickly, and cuts were extremely common.

In the same era, women reportedly created some of the first depilatory creams, made from harsh substances like quicklime and arsenic. These abrasive materials burned off unwanted hair, but would frequently harm skin in the process.

3,000 B.C.: Some of the first non-disposable razors were used in Egypt and India. Possible through advancements in metalworking, these copper razors were often customized and decorated with carvings and designs.

500 B.C.: Alexander the Great's shaving obsession increased the practice's popularity, leading to the construction of some of the first barbershops. At this same time, Roman women were starting to use shaving razors too, as well as tweezers, pumice stones and depilatories.

60 B.C.: It was around this time that Ancient Egyptian women, like Cleopatra herself, reportedly began using the sugaring hair removal method. This natural mixture was said to effectively remove hair in a harmless and relatively comfortable manner.

Ancient Egypt, and early Middle Eastern and Asian cultures were also the first users of threading hair removal; a process that removes unwanted hair by twisting it between taut cotton threads.

Hair Removal in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance

In the early Middle Ages, it was very fashionable for woman to be completely hairless—even on their heads, which allowed them to wear the large, ostentatious wigs and headpieces that were in style. To remove hair on their eyebrows, heads and necks, women plucked and shaved nearly every day. Sometimes, even the eyelashes were plucked out.

1500: The Aztecs in Central and North America were using shaving razors fashioned from volcanic obsidian glass, which was sharp and effective, but sometimes fragile.

1600s: European women kept their faces, foreheads and eyebrows plucked or shaved, in the trend of Queen Elizabeth.

Hair Removal in the 18th and 19th Centuries

1770: A French barber named Jean-Jacques Perret writes and publishes "The Art of Learning to Shave Oneself," which is where the concept of a safety razor was first introduced.

Late 1700s: The first L-shaped razor blade with a wooden guard was created. Named the Perret Razor, the hand-held guard made it easier to keep the blade steady while shaving, but it still couldn't be called a proper safety razor.

Early 1800s: Women continue to use homemade depilatories in addition to shaving and tweezing.

1847: William Henson, an English inventor, created the first shaving razor with a blade that runs perpendicular to the handle. This redesign made handling of the razor much easier for shaving the face and other body areas.

Late 1800s: The straight razor, or open razor, was created in England and quickly became the most popular razor to use. Because of the razor's tendency to dull quickly, however, the razors needed to be frequently sharpened or "stropped" to achieve effective hair removal results.

During this period was also when consumers first started to see shaving amenities for men, such as after-shave lotions, shaving soaps and shaving creams.

1875: Reportedly when the use of electricity for hair removal was first recorded. Allegedly, an opthalmalogist from St. Louis, Dr. Charles Michel, was credited with using electrolysis to treat ingrown eyelashes (trichiasis) and had been doing so since 1869.

1880: The Kampfe brothers in the U.S. created the first safety razor. With a small wire running across the razor edges on one side, the razor's featured skin guard enabled greater shaving ease and less propensity for nicks and cuts.

Hair Removal in the 20th Century-Present Day

1901: Gillette and an MIT engineer create a double-bladed safety razor that features replaceable, disposable blades. This revolutionary invention forever changes the hair removal industry.

World War I (1914-1918): Gillette makes a deal with the Armed Forces that puts Gillette razors into every soldier's standard issue gear, forever helping solidify Gillette as a leading razor brand for male hair removal.

1915: American women are influenced by a marketing campaign in Harper's Bazaar magazine that paints underarm hair as unfeminine, unhygienic and completely unfashionable for the latest sleeveless women's styles. The adoption of razor blades by more women following this campaign, helped fuel a major push in female body hair removal.

1916: New Yorker Paul Kree develops the multiple needle galvanic electrolysis method that is still well-known and used in a varied form today. Galvanic electrolysis is considered best for treating the bottom two-thirds of hair, and creates a chemical reaction in the hair follicle that effectively disables it.

1931:, Col. Jacob Schick obtains a patent for the Schick Dry Shaver, the world's first electric shaver with motor-powered razor blades.

1924: The thermolysis method of electrolysis was officially developed by a Frenchman. Thermolysis, also known as short-wave or high-frequency electrolysis, uses an alternating current to generate heat quickly to destroy hair. This method is rumored to be faster, but not as thorough as galvanic electrolysis.

1940s: The invention of Nair, which became the most successful depilatory cream to date. This product led to an increase in female hair removal consumers, as well as a stronger interest in female body hair removal altogether.

1948: Blend electrolysis received its first patent, and was created by Arthur Hinkel and Henri St. Pierre. The blend electrolysis method utilizes both previous electrolysis technologies to create an even more powerful hair removal technique.

1960s: The birth of cosmetic laser technology. Lasers for hair removal were first developed in the form of laser epilators in the 70s, but these were largely proven to be ineffective and painful according to FDA testing.

1980s: Electrolysis becomes even more popular and widespread as computerized electrolysis equipment is developed. This makes electrolysis treatments safer, more convenient, more reliable, and much easier to use—albeit still quite painful.

Late 1980s: Sisters from Rio de Janeiro open a salon in NYC and introduce America to the Brazilian wax.

1995: The FDA approves the first laser for hair removal, the Nd:YAG laser. This laser was quickly distributed for use in upscale spas and by cosmetic providers, but the product was inaccurately marketed as a permanent hair removal device. Laser hair removal technologies would later come to be labeled as permanent hair reduction devices.

1997: New laser hair removal devices were cleared by the FDA for distribution. The new devices' laser technology proved more successful at targeting hair melanin. This meant that the laser could be more easily focused on unwanted hair, and thus greater avoid burning or damaging surrounding skin tissue, which was a problem with some original designs.

Early 2000s: Developments in hair laser technology have now given way to several different hair removal lasers that can treat varying skin types and hair colors. These lasers include:

Ruby Lasers Nd:YAG Lasers Alexandrite Lasers Diode Lasers IPL (intense pulsed light)

2008: The TRIA system becomes the first FDA-approved, at-home laser hair removal device. It utilizes a diode laser to remove unwanted hair within a hand-held applicator.


99.99% INDEED!


Info taken from:

: http://www.hairremovalforum.com/laser-hair-removal-research/laser-hair-removal-history/93/
 christyis4real
Joined: 7/6/2011
Msg: 244
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 11/27/2011 6:05:30 PM
I personally feel that if a person relates shaving the kitty cat to pedophilia, they have some issues within themselves that they need to resolve.
 1234deleted1234
Joined: 10/8/2009
Msg: 245
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 11/27/2011 6:43:41 PM
^^^^^ Amen...pass the lotion, drink the potion get a notion for some motion!

Boom chicka chicka boom boom!
 m_church
Joined: 11/8/2007
Msg: 246
view profile
History
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 11/28/2011 10:58:45 AM

99.99% INDEED

That was quite face-inating.... LOL
 WinstonDoubtfire
Joined: 7/29/2009
Msg: 247
view profile
History
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 11/28/2011 11:25:47 AM
Shaved/trimmed/waxed...whatever, as long as your kitty isn't shedding or has claws...lmao
 Secondhand_Lion
Joined: 11/10/2008
Msg: 248
view profile
History
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 12/16/2011 1:59:32 AM
jco415, I believe the topic here is PUBIC hair. Unless you can show me some bare snatch history....the 99.99% is still pretty damn accurate......but you can twist or spin with facial and leg/pit hair all you like to justify your preference.

However, I'm impressed that you went through all that trouble to give us unrelated history.....maybe we can use it on beard or panty hose thread.

Always trying to outsmart the old man huh?.....do the math from 200,000 years ago to about 1985/90 and see if your still laughing at the percentage.....oops, we better add another 9. LOL
 1234deleted1234
Joined: 10/8/2009
Msg: 249
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 12/16/2011 4:08:11 AM
^^^^^^^The practice of pubic hair removal goes back to the dawn of civilization. To early Egyptians, a smooth and hairless body was the standard of beauty. The practice first gained total acceptance when it was practiced by the wife of Farao; afterwards, every upper class Egyptian woman made sure there was not a single hair on her body with the exception of her head. They used primitive depilatory creams and a form of waxing that utilized a sticky emulsion of oil and honey - the forerunner of what we now call "sugaring."

The Greeks adopted the ideal of smoothness, capturing it over and again in their sculpture. Ancient Greek sculptures of women are universally clean-shaven, whereas the sculptures of men have pubic hair. The Greeks believed that a smooth, hairless body exemplified youth and beauty. In "Sexual Life in Ancient Greece" by Hans Licht, the author describes how the Greeks disapproved of women with pubic hair and considered it ugly. It was considered a sign of class distinction and subsequently all upper-class women practiced pubic hair removal, as did many women of the lesser classes.

The Romans also disapproved of pubic hair; young girls began removing it as soon as the first hair appeared. They used tweezers, which they called the "volsella" as well as a kind of depilatory cream called the "philotrum" or "dropax" which was sometimes made with bryonia and foreshadowed modern depilatory creams. Waxing with resin or pitch was also used to depilate. Furthermore, the practice of pubic hair removal wasn't unique to Rome - it was practiced in even the most remote parts of the empire. Julius Caesar (101-44 BC) writes that, "The Britons shave every part of their body except their head and upper lip." It is reported that Poppaea, wife of the Roman Emperor Nero, used depilatory creams to remove unwanted body hair daily. At that time, the latest available creams included some wonderful ingredients like resin, pitch, white vine or ivy gum extract, ass' fat, she-goat's gall, bat's blood, and powdered viper.

Islam also has a long history of pubic hair removal. According to the Sunnah, every adult Muslim, as a part of keeping his/her body clean, should remove the hair from his pubic area and armpits. The hair may be removed through any method that one feels comfortable with. The spread of Islam brought the practice to India, Northern Africa, and the other vast areas of the world under Muslim influence. In 1520, Bassano de Zra wrote that "The Turks consider it sinful when a woman lets the hair on her private parts grow. As soon as a woman feels the hair is growing, she hurries to the public bath to have it removed or remove it herself." The public baths all had special rooms where the ladies could get rid of their hair. Even today, the hamams (public baths) still have special rooms for the ladies to depilate.

The returning Crusaders (1096-1270) brought the practice back to Europe. In many European castles built between 1200 and 1600 AD, a special room was constructed where the ladies of the court could gather to shave. During the Renaissance, the practice of pubic hair removal flourished. Sixteenth and seventeenth century artists portrayed women as having little or no pubic hair. The work of Rubens, whose models typified the ideal in feminine beauty at the time, most dramatically reveals this.

The habit of depilating started to wane (publicly at least) during the reign of Catherine de Medici (1547-1589) who was then queen of France and something of a religious zealot. She forbade her ladies in waiting to remove their pubic hair any longer; however, it was still widely practiced until the reign of Queen Victoria (1837-1901) and the smothering prudishness of the "Victorian Era." Even then, it remained popular in private, especially for the ruling classes. There is some photographic evidence ranging from the time of the Civil War to the "blue movies" of the 1920s and 30s that shows that the amount of pubic hair during that time varied from full to none. Even though repressed by the outward morality of the era, it appears pubic shaving never disappeared but instead more appropriately went underground.


However, I'm impressed that you went through all that trouble to give us unrelated history.....maybe we can use it on beard or panty hose thread.


It's no trouble at all...it's called GOOGLE+C&P....Us younger folk know how to use them....and often do before spouting "knowledge"...
 Consigliori
Joined: 1/7/2008
Msg: 250
view profile
History
Shaving = Pedophilia?
Posted: 12/16/2011 8:04:49 AM
Definitely a pedophilia thing. Guys who are into that probably carry candy in their pockets and hang out at playgrounds...
Show ALL Forums  > Sex and Dating  > Shaving = Pedophilia?