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Re: Re: Okay . . . (Reply to this comment)
by ed_grover
It's not short enough to itch as it grows back and it's nice to get tan there, too.
Ed
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May 07 '04 8:09 am PDT
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Re: Okay . . . (Reply to this comment)
by Penguinlady
...buzz-cutting the nether regions... sounds pretty intriguing, if itchy. I remember after childbirth, back in the days when women were shaved completely, the agonies of itching I went through as it all grew back - ugh!
Margaret
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May 06 '04 7:27 am PDT
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Re: very informative (Reply to this comment)
by Penguinlady
My niece is married to a Japanese man, but her two kids (son age 4, daughter age 1) are too young for us to know how all those opposing genes shook out. But the little boy is clearly Eurasian, and the little girl looks completely Japanese, so we'll just have to wait and see...
Thanks for stopping by -
Margaret
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May 06 '04 7:25 am PDT
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Okay . . . (Reply to this comment)
by ed_grover
being Caucasian and Native American makes me brown-haired and not that hairy. The radiation I had for head and neck cancer 20+ years ago killed most of my beard, but there are still places where I have to shave. I'll stick to shaving my face and buzz-cutting the nether regions for personal reasons. Very interesting review.
Ed
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May 05 '04 6:32 am PDT
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very informative (Reply to this comment)
by pilarzmom
My sons acquired a little bit of both my husband (Chinese) and me (Caucasian). My oldest has stick straight coarse hair of his dad's but hairy legs (me!). The youngest has smooth hairless legs (dad) and my softer hair. It's very interesting how the genetic pool got stirred up a bit!
Peggy (gorilla legs if it weren't for shaving)
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May 04 '04 7:18 pm PDT
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