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Has anyone ever tried a hair removal gel?


Guest ValerieD

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Guest Donna Jean

.

Well, one drawback is that once you stop using it, the hair returns....

And...it doesn't work at all on some people.......

Look for Google reviews on it.....

It irritated my skin, and my bikini area became all red and blotchy. I’m glad I didn’t try it on my face, because who knows what would happen to my fair skin. Instead of the hair coming off, they wrinkled and curled and became ingrown hairs. After a week, stubs of hair grew under the skin, even in areas that were not a problem in the past.

Good luck

Dee Jay

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From the reviews I read most people said the bottle was too small and it didn't "retard" hair growth to a desirable level, plus it gets expensive over time. Most people said you might as well use Veet (Not on your face though) and some said that it didn't irritate their skin the way veet and similar products do.

I imagine it wouldn't do anything to stop or slow hair growth in someone who is not on HRT since even prescription hair gels/creams (Vaniqa or something?) won't work on men at normal male hormone levels.

Might be worth a shot but I'd try to save my pennies for laser/electrolysis if at all possible. Even if you can only go once every few months it would be a start and if your skin is anything like mine it will thank you for the break between treatments.Laser only seems to get more painful the more regularly you go so it will help you rebuild your pain tolerance and hopefully a long break between treatments would optimize the number of hairs being zapped as well.

In my experiences there really are no cheap, easy, effective methods of hair removal.

Good luck...

~Jade.

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Guest ValerieD

I should have known it was too good to be true.

From the reviews I read most people said the bottle was too small and it didn't "retard" hair growth to a desirable level, plus it gets expensive over time. Most people said you might as well use Veet (Not on your face though) and some said that it didn't irritate their skin the way veet and similar products do.

I imagine it wouldn't do anything to stop or slow hair growth in someone who is not on HRT since even prescription hair gels/creams (Vaniqa or something?) won't work on men at normal male hormone levels.

Might be worth a shot but I'd try to save my pennies for laser/electrolysis if at all possible. Even if you can only go once every few months it would be a start and if your skin is anything like mine it will thank you for the break between treatments.Laser only seems to get more painful the more regularly you go so it will help you rebuild your pain tolerance and hopefully a long break between treatments would optimize the number of hairs being zapped as well.

In my experiences there really are no cheap, easy, effective methods of hair removal.

Good luck...

~Jade.

My original transition plans included squeezing in a laser session whenever I'm home; unfortunately, that was before I found out that my parents won't provide any financial support towards transitioning.

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