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Anonymous
>>67724 From the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Medical Myths section:
Shaving does not cause hair to grow back faster, darker or coarser. Shaving is just a method of cutting the hair at the skin surface and has no effect on the part of the hair shaft below the skin surface, which is where growth and pigmentation occur, says Hoskyn. Although the hair may seem to grow faster after shaving, this is just an illusion: a small amount of growth on a clean-shaven face is much more noticeable than a small amount of growth on a bearded face. Likewise, the blunt, stubbly ends of new growth can give the illusion of darker, coarser hair.
So, while shaving does not cause hair to grow in thicker and darker, it does not cause lightening and softening either. It does, however, appear darker.
If hair really did become lighter and softer due to shaving, then a woman who begins shaving at 15 would likely be able to stop by forty. But we know that this is not a reality.
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