May 02, 2015 8 min read
By Emma Anderson, Women's Health Magazine. Our nether-regions seem to be undergoing widespread deforestation… but why? WH takes a look at that increasingly endangered species, the female pube. Muff, lady garden, bush, beaver… the names for our pubic hair are plentiful. Our pubes are becoming scarce, though. Large numbers of women are now shaving, waxing or lasering all their foliage. The prepubescent look, it seems, is having more than just a moment. “Pubic hair is definitely a threatened species,” says Dr Ginni Mansberg, WH health expert. “If I see a woman under 30 with pubic hair I think, Oh – I haven’t seen that for a while.” Urologist Dr Sara Ramsey agrees. She and her colleagues noticed the trend creeping in circa 2006. “It’s now very unusual to see young women with any pubic hair at all,” she says. “The Brazilian or Hollywood is the norm.” Dr. Elna Rudolph adds, "I would not say that seeing any hair is rare, but seeing somebody who does not engage in some sort of pubic grooming is rare. I think most people will do some grooming before they see a doctor for a problem in that area, so we are probably not the best people to ask. Women who did not wax before seeing me would often apologize for it, which is completely unnecessary – just putting it out there: doctors honestly don’t care about your pubic grooming. Your partner might, but we don’t!" So far, there hasn’t been much extensive research on pubic hair removal, but psychologist Dr Marika Tiggemann is one of the few to look into it. Her research found that 60 percent of the women removed at least some of their pubic hair, with 48 percent removing most or all of it. A study published last year in the journal Body Image also found that younger women were more likely to groom, especially those between the ages or 21 and 30. “It seems to be a real age thing,” says Tiggeman. “Older women think of [total pubic hair removal] as strange, but for younger women it’s normal.” All of which got us asking some pressing questions. Such as: for the love of God, why? Surely we have better things to spend time and money on? And – aside from sustaining sales of board shorts – what are pubes actually for, anyway?
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