Full Body Hair Removal |
Full Body Hair Removal And Fashion ExpectationsAttitudes towards the human body change all the time.
Not long ago nobody spoke about, and few practiced, full body hair removal.
In fact, not long ago nobody spoke about, and few practiced, partial body hair removal.
In the dawn of civilization, around the Fertile Crescent, in the land of Ur, the first cities were being built. At that time hair was cut but rarely shaven.
Even further back, the nomad tribes that were on their never ending travels, never shaved.
The Egyptians of old did shave their heads, and from what we can gather from the mural paintings that have survived down to this day and age, they did practice body shaving.
The Greeks did. A lot.
The Persians hardly at all. In fact they had their bodies covered under many layers of clothes.
The Aztecs, although endowed with little body hair, did remove some of their hair. They also did extraordinary things to themselves.
The Romans did - they shaved their beards and some gladiators shaved their bodies to show off their well built muscles. They were the equivalent pop stars of their time - although failure was a step into oblivion.
In Roman times other civilizations had different hair fashions, and shaving did take place.
In the times of the Holy Roman Empire, in Byzantium, the nobles and the merchant classes did shave - and did remove body hair.
During the middle ages, the serves and field hands didn't. They didn't have the time, the life expectancy or the tools. In fact I am sure they didn't have the inclination to either.
Their feudal lords, the nobles and kings, did shave occasionally, they did pluck eyebrows, but all in all, by our standards, they were not into cleanliness. Even the most beautiful women of the period (a few hundred years being the period) had hairy arm pits.
In the Victorian Age, many people did, but nobody admitted it.
During the 1920's, in the Charleston epoch, women's skirt length went up, shoulders were bared and everybody had a lot of fun.
Hair removal was obvious again and turned into a big business.
In the sixties, a large portion of the then younger generation, the baby boomers, went the other way. They let their hair down. The slightly older people shaved and women removed some body hair. Men didn't.
Hair removal, be it a full body shave, a partial body shave or whatever, has a direct relationship to fashion and trends.
Today, in the western world, in this global village, fashions are very much in vogue. They come and go quickly. But there is a difference emerging, that of the "fashion niches".
And one fashion niche that is expanding rapidly is that of full body hair removal.
Many methods are applied and few are chosen; but perhaps the favorite is the electric shaver. It's simplicity and ease of use fits in perfectly with this niche's population expectations.
In the 21st century people do, many people do, some talk about it; others donīt. It is a matter of choice and no longer depends on what society accepts or condemns.
Do you?
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