PDA

View Full Version : Waxing and sugaring: How young is too young?



Teh One Who Knocks
05-13-2016, 11:42 AM
By Jay Crandal - AZ Family


http://i.imgur.com/Kc9NNkdl.jpg
"It just makes me feel better about myself, so why not do it?" she said.

NEAR SCOTTSDALE, AZ (KPHO/KTVK) -

When you first step into Sugar Sugar Salon in Scottsdale, your first thought might be that the young ladies waiting in the lobby are there for a haircut. But it turns out that 14-year-old Macy Deak and many other teens coming to the salon are looking for a more permanent type of hair removal.

"I get my eyebrows done and I get my lip done," Macy said. "But I want to get my arms done because I don't like having hair on my arms."

It turns out she is not alone. Salons across the country are seeing more teens going in for waxing, or in Deak’s case, sugaring.

"We take sugar, lemon and water, we melt it down and cool it and it is able to adhere to your hair and dead skin," Sugar Sugar owner Aimee Blake explained. She believes sugaring is less painful and less irritating to your skin than waxing.

Blake said the salon had barely opened its doors when moms started coming in asking about hair removal for teens.

"Well, we were open about a week and all of a sudden I had mothers coming in asking if we were sugaring minors," she said.

After hearing that some teens had been bullied because of thick eyebrows or dark hair on their lips or faces, Blake decided her salon would offer a special menu just for teens.

"So, brows would definitely be No.1, and lip, quite a few young women don’t want the darkened peach fuzz. So we can take care of that too," Blake said.

But the services for teens are limited. Blake said Sugar Sugar does not, for example, do a full brow shaping.

http://i.imgur.com/WoMfiF7l.jpg
Macy Deak, 14, saying sugaring her eyebrows maker her feel more confident.

"We don't bikinis," she said. "And we tell the mothers right up front if at any point the daughter says, 'No,I don't like this. I am uncomfortable,' we have the right to stop this."

Blake said that while some girls have tried shaving, the hair can actually look thicker afterward. She also would not use wax on teen skin.

Macy said she had tried and although it was unpleasant, it was worth it to get the look she wanted.

"I used to get really red and it used to hurt for maybe a few hours," she said.

But it wasn't quite enough.

"I had more [hair] growing down by my eyelid and so it bothered me a lot and so I wanted a little more shape," she explained

That is why her mom, Sherry Deak brought, took Macy to Sugar Sugar.

"You want to give them every opportunity to feel confident," she said.

Peter Tumolo, a licensed therapist with Arcadia Counseling Center, said it is fine for kids to want to look their best, but he encourages parents to talk with their kids about what they are looking for.

"I would encourage parents to ask their children what is their motivation for this. What is the end result? What are we trying to achieve?"

Tumolo said that conversation can help teens avoid heading down a potentially dangerous path.

"And if we are constantly pinning our self-worth and self-esteem on what other people think, we can really get trapped in a cycle of chasing after other people's approval," he explained.

Deak said she thought about that, but in the end decided fewer hairs actually did mean more confidence for Macy.

"It brightens her whole demeanor," she said.

Macy agrees.

"It just makes me feel better about myself, so why not do it?"

Tumolo said if kids fall apart or become overly emotional if you say no, it might be a sign that the request is about more than just grooming. He said you need to let kids know they are loved and accepted just as they are, but it's up to you to decide what is right for your child.

You can reach Tumolo at 480-227-6440 or ArcadiaCounselingCenter.com.

Blake said teens younger than 15 need parental consent for any procedure and reiterated that the salon reserves the right to stop if the child feels uncomfortable.

You can find Sugar Sugar at SugarSugarAZ.com or 480-36-SUGAR (78427).

DemonGeminiX
05-13-2016, 11:43 AM
That's ridiculous.

KevinD
05-13-2016, 01:57 PM
This is different from girls plucking eyebrows how? I guarantee when you were in middle school there were girls plucking eyebrows, waxing lips and legs. I have no problem with the op.

DemonGeminiX
05-13-2016, 02:17 PM
This is different from girls plucking eyebrows how? I guarantee when you were in middle school there were girls plucking eyebrows, waxing lips and legs. I have no problem with the op.

:lol:

I guarantee you, when I was in junior high school (Yankee equivalent of middle school) in NJ back in the late 80s, there absolutely were not. I promise you, girls didn't start doing that shit until high school.

At least, they didn't the do facial waxing thing. The legs were always smooth.

DemonGeminiX
05-13-2016, 02:20 PM
Also, they didn't make that big an issue of it to go to a spa (or whatever) to do it either. They did that shit themselves in their own bathrooms at home.

allsmiles
05-13-2016, 02:25 PM
I don't take issue with it either. When I was 14, I was shaving my downstairs, even though no one saw it but me at that point. I just didn't, and still don't, like the idea of hair.

I'm blessed in that I don't have hair on my face in places it shouldn't be, but I completely understand why teenage girls who do would want it removed. It's just hair. I think my only issue would be if the parents were paying for it. Let the little brats earn the money to do it themselves by doing chores, mowing lawns, babysitting, etc.

DemonGeminiX
05-13-2016, 02:35 PM
And my objection is not that girls are doing this junk, it's that there are places that are charging for girls to do it for them, and there are parents that are taking them to these places. They're kids for chrissakes.

PorkChopSandwiches
05-13-2016, 02:40 PM
I pay for my daughter to get her eyebrows waxed

DemonGeminiX
05-13-2016, 02:43 PM
It's your kid, dude.

KevinD
05-13-2016, 02:51 PM
Just asked my wife when she started plucking brows: 13. She's 52. Not all girls did in middle school, but I knew some who entered puberty early that did. I do get your point about going to a salon for it as opposed to doing it themselves.

PorkChopSandwiches
05-13-2016, 03:13 PM
My wife's best friend is a waxer, so she comes over and does it here. If its being done anyway, waxing is quick and easy as opposed to plucking.

allsmiles
05-13-2016, 04:06 PM
I wouldn't know. I've never waxed. Plucking/shaving myself is much cheaper and less of a hassle, I would imagine.

I don't have any children myself, so guess I can't really judge there, but my parents would have never even used the gas/time to take me somewhere to have hair removed, and would have laughed in my face if I asked them to pay for it.

PorkChopSandwiches
05-13-2016, 04:27 PM
Its convenient since she is already here waxing my wife. I dont see the big deal if you are doing it anyway, at least with wax you get the roots so it comes back less

Muddy
05-13-2016, 04:28 PM
Id like to have my anus bleached.

DemonGeminiX
05-14-2016, 12:13 AM
Its convenient since she is already here waxing my wife. I dont see the big deal if you are doing it anyway, at least with wax you get the roots so it comes back less

I just think that a market cropping up specifically for teen girls to do this junk is a bit much. At least you're just including your kid with your wife and having it done by a friend in the privacy of your own home.