I also have hair on my hands and a lot of it. In our family we have a gene to be hairier, and after a hormonal treatment (unnecessary, as it turned out), my hair became even thicker and longer. Well, I've never removed them, and I won't, because they don't bother me, because I don't care if others like me, and because I consider them a natural filter that keeps the wrong men away from me. I'm in my 30s, but I've never considered myself less feminine because of them, and there have always been men who have liked me over the years, despite them. I even think that many men do not notice them, but rather look at the woman as a whole. You have a problem that you consider a defect to be something that is a natural part of the human body, and that you don't care what others think. You don't deserve your girlfriend. You deserve a muffin, who will be preoccupied only with her appearance and will dump you for the first person you meet who has more money than you. Then you will learn to appreciate some other things in man, not only the hairless body.
1 gigimiami answered
Um, what nonsense? I also have hair on my hands, but I don't remove them, because if I start they will become like men's beards! Better sparse and thin than needles. Grow up a little, it's high time women are not ashamed of the fact that the most natural thing grows on their skin - hair! It is socially accepted to have hair and eyebrows, but not everything else. Think about whether she really has to remove her hair anywhere or does it for the comfort of others and especially yours, because I'll tell you a secret - a single woman, especially if she doesn't have an active sex life, doesn't bother to get hairless (because there is no one for), very few women do it really because they do not like to have hair. And the other thing, when you're in a long relationship, you see the person in front of you, you know him, and such little things shouldn't be an obstacle,