T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
224.1 | WAXING IS TORTUROUS!!! | LA780::PERRY | | Thu Mar 05 1987 19:22 | 15 |
| The reason I shave my legs (dread) is for the disgusting panty
hose that I seldom wear to the office. I hate prickly legs and
my boyfriend hates it even more. However, I don't shave my
legs for him, it's me that can't sleep with prickly legs. As for
underarms, well... I basically hate putting a sharp cutting
instrument to my skin but when I was in Italy a couple summers
ago I gagged when the waitresses served my food with their hairy
armpits on a hot summer evening. I also don't care to have
"razor burn" from my boyfriend's slightly unshaven face. I also
am NOT attracted to men with beards. Oh, what a dichotomy!!
Quite frankly, I'd prefer to not have the hair on my legs and
underarms because it's annoying, and on the other hand, I do
not shave every day because that's just a pain. Just typing
this is making me nuts because I'm on the losing end here.
-Nina
|
224.2 | A few answers | STUBBI::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Thu Mar 05 1987 20:22 | 32 |
| Lets see....
As to shaving my legs, in the winter time I generally don't.
Since my hair is light on my legs and my skirts are long I
figure no one will notice anyway. (and being near sighted I
hate to shave in the shower and my teenage son has this unreasonable
aversion to letting me use his electric on my legs ;-) ).
(My husband doesn't use a razor and yes I know I could buy one.)
As to under arms, I tried going without back in my "mildly hippy"
days, and lasted about 2 months. I didn't like the way I smelled!
2. As to locking the door while showering at work I think I would
too. Not out of shyness but to prevent any weirdos from wandering
in when I was undressed. Perhaps the women who use the locker and
shower regularly could be issued keys.
I have always thouht that women were more body shy than men. I know
guys urinate in semi public and seemed not to be bothered by
group showering in gym. Certainly my husband and sons are more
apt to wander around our house in their skivies than their sisters
or I am. :-}. I do remember a discussion on this subject before
- either here or in parenting where Dirk Lust commented that after
bringing up three daughters he thought women were more comfortable
about being undressed than men. It may thendepend on your family
and how you were brought up.
It is my impression tho that in the early teens girls are more
embrassed by the physcial changes to their bodies than boys
are and are more apt to try and hide themselves.
Bonnie
|
224.3 | | STUBBI::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Thu Mar 05 1987 20:25 | 4 |
| p.s. I think shaving of the legs started in the twenties
along with the wearing of silk stockings. I assume that
people thought hair under fine silk looked odd and it may
have damaged the expensive stockings.
|
224.4 | We need more female architects | ULTRA::ZURKO | Security is not pretty | Fri Mar 06 1987 08:34 | 6 |
| I think whoever designed those darn stalls in LTN2 must be a man :-)!
The stall door is directly across from the bathroom door (wide cracks
and all). I don't know about the balance on the stall door, but I bet
some women look it to keep both doors from opening at once, while they're
standing there naked.
Mez
|
224.5 | | FAUXPA::ENO | Bright Eyes | Fri Mar 06 1987 11:39 | 19 |
|
1. The reason more women don't refuse to shave is simply this --
we who operate in a business environment have to function within
a not very flexible preconceived perception of what is appropriate
appearance. Hairy legs and underarms are perceived as being
inappropriate, so basically, if we want to make it, we shave (the
same concept as "dress for success"). We cater to other people's
notions of what our appearance should be in order to smooth our
own way in life.
2. I've noticed this, too; although I grew up sharing a bedroom
with two sisters and we are fairly open with our bodies among the
female members of the family, I feel the same reluctance to expose
myself in front of other women. Could it be that we are afraid
to be compared to them? Women are very critical of their own bodies
in our culture.
Gloria
|
224.6 | pricklies | ULTRA::GUGEL | Simplicity is Elegance | Fri Mar 06 1987 11:53 | 6 |
| re prickly legs:
Prickly legs only last until the hair grows out. I haven't shaved
my legs since 1981 and haven't had any pricklies since then.
-Ellen
|
224.8 | "dress for success" protocol sometimes requires | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Mar 06 1987 13:56 | 3 |
| I only shave my legs when protocol requires that I wear stockings
to something. I usually shave my underarms when I shave my legs,
or sometimes in the summer. I'm not very "hairy" anyways.
|
224.9 | Hairy legs, arms | CSC32::JOHNS | God is Real, Unless Declared Integer | Fri Mar 06 1987 14:34 | 8 |
| I started shaving when I was in 4th Grade, since Sheila Breyer had
such lovely blond hair on her legs and I had this awful black stuff
on mine. I was much more fastidious about it in high school, but
even now I won't wear a dress unless I have recently shaved my legs
and I cannot stand the sight of unshaved armpits on women *or* men.
I have known many friends who don't shave at all, but it's not for
me.
Carol
|
224.10 | just braid it! | WATNEY::SPARROW | You want me to do what?? | Fri Mar 06 1987 14:55 | 16 |
| I have very dark hair on my legs, and it grows rather long too.
The only time I quit shaving my legs was in basic training in the
Army, we had a contest to see whos would grow the longest. I won.
One lady corn rolled(like french braid) my hairy legs and hung some
beeds on them. Then I stood formation (we wore skirts with white
anklets and black shoes.....very tacky) The drill sargent almost
choked since I was platoon leader and was standing in front of the
entire group when the commander did the inspection. I got cited
for being out of uniform. No sense of humor in the army.
But seriously, because my leg hair grows so long I am subject to
ingrown hairs. So I shave for two reasons, *I* like the way my
legs look better, and I don't get ingrown hairs. As for the underarm
hair, Deoderant works better on me when shaved, so I will continue
to do that to by choice.
vivian
|
224.11 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | | Fri Mar 06 1987 16:26 | 9 |
| I just like the way it feels to have smooth shaven legs.
As far as women undressing around each other, I think the point
made about not wanting to be compared has something to do with it.
After all, there is much more pressure from society/the media/somebody
for women to have beautiful bodies than there is for men.
Lorna
|
224.12 | I conform....but I don't like it! | TLE::BENOIT | Beth Benoit DTN 381-2074 | Fri Mar 06 1987 16:48 | 22 |
|
> I just like the way it feels to have smooth shaven legs.
I'm starting to feel outnumbered! I hate to shave. In the
wintertime, when I can get away with it, I don't. The hair
stops feeling prickly within a week or two and becomes
delightfully soft. Then I have a major separation crisis
when something comes up which requires me to wear a skirt
and I have to shave it all off.
What really bugs me is the reaction people have to a woman
with hairy legs. I admit that my hair (when it grows out)
is considerably longer and darker than most women's (and
most men's for that matter). But I hate the shocked looks
I sometimes get in women's locker rooms when I'm changing
from slacks into sweats and I haven't shaved in a while.
On a good day I'll shrug it off as being their problem.
But on a bad day,....well, no one likes to be stared at.
My hat's off to all the women out there who can withstand
the social pressure to shave. I can't do it!
|
224.13 | soft and fuzzy legs | BARTOK::MEEHAN | | Fri Mar 06 1987 17:23 | 9 |
|
I, too, have not shaved my legs since 1980 and am much happier for it.
Last September I saw Rula Lenska (of VO5 hairspray fame) on stage in London.
Because we were sitting in the second row, we got a very good view of the
actors. To my delight, I noticed that Rula has not shaved her legs for at
least as long as me. I never thought of Rula Lenska as a role model, but I
take 'em where I can get 'em!
....Margaret
|
224.14 | Hair's Good Stuff | NRLABS::TATISTCHEFF | | Sat Mar 07 1987 14:27 | 38 |
| Isn't it a drag that shaving is an issue at all?
Me, I got hair. Lots of it. Won't shave the "bikini" area (because
it hurts a lot) and so never (ever, ever) go to any beach which
won't permit me to go nude (I feel less like a gorilla naked than
in a bathing suit).
Underarms? _I_ still think underarm hair is attractive and that
there's nothing wrong with the mild scent of sweat (like the smell
of s*x, it seems pretty human to me), so I haven't shaved there
since I was 12 (the one and only time I tried it). [I can hear
choruses of "ewww, gross." Never have won any converts on that
issue, but know enough women who feel the same way to know I'm not
_that_ strange.]
Legs? Yet more hair. I shave them a couple times a year, mostly
when dealing with men who don't know me, my work, or my competence.
Sometimes shave them when I feel like "dolling up," which also entails
putting goop (aka makeup) on my face. I try not to make it a big
deal, but if people insist on bringing it up...
I admire one of my close friends who has _never_ plucked or shaved
the scads of big, black hair around her nipples. How many dark-haired
women are that confident of themselves and their attractiveness?
Pretty "gutsy" if you ask me.
It's always funny to watch the reactions of people who see my hairy
legs for the first time: they stare then look away quickly but are
drawn right back to my sockless (and hairy) ankles.
My attitude at this point is, like Popeye "I yam what I yam," and
if you don't like my hair <also insert: if you don't think I'm
attractive>, that's your tough luck; _I_ like it, and there are
plenty of people who don't think it's revolting to be born hairy.
It _is_ a pain to deal with men on the street who call me "gorilla
mama" when I wear shorts, though...
Lee
|
224.15 | grossed out by your own hair? | ULTRA::GUGEL | Simplicity is Elegance | Mon Mar 09 1987 08:34 | 15 |
| re -1:
Yeah! You said it well. People here are saying things like "underarm
hair grosses me out." Well, indeed, that is your problem and I
do not feel that I need to adjust for you. Underarm hair is *natural*,
not *gross*!
BTW, on my bicycle trip in 1985 I did not meet any woman who shaved
at all (I met about a couple dozen women). It probably had a lot to do
with not having to meet society's expectations (like work situations)
and being outdoors the whole time, but also none of these women were
"grossed out" by their own hair.
-Ellen
|
224.16 | Bridget Bardot doesn't shave | TOPDOC::JAMES | | Mon Mar 09 1987 12:05 | 18 |
| I have very little body hair, and what I have is blonde, and I
absolutely refuse to shave it. If anyone asks (none of their business,
right?) I just tell them that European women don't shave, and they
are very sexy. I guess I do get defensive about it, especially underarm
hair, but I have never been embarrassed enough to shave.
My daughter, who has darker hair, does shave, but then she always
has, even when her hair was lighter. That's her choice.
Except for in front of my daughter and mother, I am very shy about
revealing my body. Those open dressing rooms in department stores
give me agonies. I guess I've stopped wondering why; that's just
the way I am.
My body is mine to do with as I please, so I leave it unshaven and
hidden!
Stel
|
224.17 | Nous nous rasons (malheureusement :-) | SHIRE::MAURER | Energy begets energy. | Mon Mar 09 1987 12:47 | 21 |
| re: .16
Unfortunately many European women do shave. And depilate, and wax,
and otherwise torture themselves.
If you ever come here and forget your razor or "Neet", they're readily
available in most stores.
re: .0
Funny, I used to be on the self-conscious side. Then I joined a
"Fitness" (the generic noun in French for "health club") and got
totally accustomed to strolling about the women's locker room au naturel.
Nobody bothers to wrap themselves in a towel for a sauna or turkish
bath either, as Hollywood would have us believe.
It's just very comfortable. Not all the women have classically
beautiful bodies (well, ok, *none* of us have classically beautiful
bodies), but each seems to have made some kind of peace with her body.
Helen
|
224.18 | My razor lasts about a year | BUFFER::LEEDBERG | Truth is Beauty, Beauty is Truth | Mon Mar 16 1987 19:59 | 13 |
|
I shave under my arms a couple of times during the summer, almost
never between September and May. My legs get clipped every 6 weeks
or longer. I wear dark stockings with suits and dresses, I don't
know if anyone notices the hair - I don't. I don't think that any
body hair is gross, sometimes is nice and soft and ....
I know of a number of professional women who do not shave, but then
they don't flaunt it either.
_peggy
|
224.19 | I do and don't mind | JUNIOR::TASSONE | Wayside Inn, My favorite | Tue Mar 17 1987 12:24 | 16 |
| I'm prone to ingrown hairs but I shave my legs and armpits regularly.
My dermotologist said that I have been shaving too often and too
hard. So, now I only shave every-other day (except in summer when
I shave EVERY day). I wear a teeny weeny bikini so off goes the
bikini hairline every weekend. I use a dipilatory (cream that burns
the hair) and I have had no problems.
As for changing in front of other women at my heatlh club, I NEVER
use the changing stalls (too much bother to go from the stall to
the locker back to the locker to the stall and so forth. So, I
just strip down and I don't care who's looking. I'm happy with
my looks and if THEY are embarassed, so be it. BTW, I don't have
a terrific body that you read about. I'm just comfortable with
what I do have and I don't hide behind the locker door either.
But, I did hit my head on one last week while tying my shoes. Ouch.
:-)
|
224.20 | tatoos and hair! | IMAGIN::KOLBE | Playing with Fire | Fri Mar 20 1987 20:05 | 7 |
| I have a butterfly tatoo on my hip and I think the looks I get in
the ladies locker room are funny. I never shave my legs in the winter
but my hair is blonde and light so it's not much of a statement.
I still can't bring myself to go bare legged in the summer without
shaving though. American men act so grossed out by it, can I claim
to be a victim of society or must I admit to vanity and wanting
to please men? Liesl
|
224.21 | power tripping | BRAE::BUSDIECKER | | Sat Mar 21 1987 11:09 | 9 |
|
re.20
You can claim anything you please -- personally though, I'd rather show
strength and admit vanity than weakness in claiming to be a victim of
society.
- Linda
|
224.22 | And I'm A American MALE | FDCV13::CALCAGNI | A.F.F.A. | Sat Mar 21 1987 15:20 | 3 |
|
Hair never bothered me!
|
224.23 | Pleasant Surprise | NRLABS::TATISTCHEFF | | Sun Mar 22 1987 09:29 | 5 |
| HALLELUJAH!!!!
And I thought _all_ men were crazy. :^)
Lee
|
224.24 | I *do* mind (the lack of privacy). | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Sun Mar 29 1987 21:03 | 21 |
| It seems to me that Selma has shaved a couple of times in the
last 17 years, but I have no idea why. It wasn't to please or
impress me, as I see nothing wrong with a little hair. It
certainly doesn't detract from her sexiness.
As to locker-rooms, I've always envied women theirs. I can't
stand the lack of privacy in men's locker and shower rooms. I am
very uncomfortable being naked in front of strange men, and
moderately so in front male friends. Nudity in front of strange
women (which I've seldom experienced) is embarassing and in
front of female friends doesn't bother me at all.
And it's not (all) what you are thinking. It all harkens back to
my boyhood, when I got beaten up a lot--by virtually every guy
in my class. While I got over the grudges and the bitterness and
the fear and the insecurity moderately fast, all things
considered, it left me with two quirks. I don't like sitting
with my back to a room or door, and I don't like to be naked in
front of men. Both amount to not wanting to be vulnerable.
JimB.
|
224.25 | | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis (the Menace) Ahern 223-5882 | Mon Mar 30 1987 12:45 | 8 |
| RE: .24 "equipment envy"
There's a funny scene in the movie, "Lucas", in which the title
character, an academically advanced, pint-sized, 13-year old boy,
uses his wit to turn the tables on some locker room jocks who cast
aspersions on the size of his "equipment".
|
224.26 | RE: .25 -- Envy not the problem. It's Fear. | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Mon Mar 30 1987 20:02 | 17 |
| Actually, other than one incident in Jr. High School, I've never
really had any experience with "equipment envy". I do remember
be ridiculed once either for being too hairy or not hairy enough
in that period when if you are not absolutely average the kids
will point it out. To be honest I don't remember which it was,
although I suspect that I was late. What I do remember is that I
was terrified it would turn into another beating--they had
mostly stopped, but weren't unheard of.
My discomfort at being naked in front of men has nothing to do,
so far as I'm aware, with equipment envy or anything but shear
discomfort at being vulnerable. It's like being unarmed and
facing threatening or armed people, or sitting with my back
exposed to dangers I can not see. I knew fear of physical threat
for so long that it left me uncomfortable in a few situations.
JimB.
|
224.27 | My reasons | GENRAL::FRASHER | An opinion for any occasion | Mon Mar 30 1987 20:27 | 24 |
| As a boy, being naked in a locker room bothered me mostly because
of the problem of getting an erection for no reason whatsoever and
especially if there was the *slightest* reason to. I was taught
that its wrong to be naked in front of someone else, especially
girls, and that was enough reason for it. The stress of being seen
coupled with the stress of what would be thought if it *did* happen
was more than enough to cause it to happen. When it did happen,
the other boys would tease and make it that much worse.
Now, as an adult, I don't let it bother me, I have better mind control,
although it still bothers me a little. Now, in a women's locker
room...different story. There's no amount of control in that situation
for me. I have learned to accept that men don't have separate showers
and lockers and I take a quick shower facing the wall. It bothers
me around strange men but not around friends. Even adult men will
stare and giggle, believe it or not. The adults I'm thinking of
were both in their early 20's and looked like the type who would
tease someone just for fun. I simply turned and faced the wall,
discreetly, finished and left.
And, to answer .0, 1), my wife shaves because, like me, she doesn't
wish to attract attention.
Spence
|
224.28 | Hair Revolt | GRECO::ANDERSON | Home of the Convoluted Brain | Sun May 10 1987 23:50 | 25 |
| I haven't been following the conference for a while, so I was delighted
to come upon this note upon my return.
I vote for hair. As a male, shaving is equally onerous. I also
vote for sweat, as have a couple of other replies have indicated.
If we could rely on our sense of smell a bit more, we could probably
avoid some less than satisfying entaglements with members of the
opposite gender who just don't "smell" right. It sounds funny,
but it would probably help. Leave it to the guys (gender implied)
on Madison Avenue to foul up a wonderfully natural contribution
to natural selection. Yes, I find odor and hair sexy. Beyond that,
they are both wonderful indicators or health.
After we win the hair revolution, could we then focus on neckties.
I am told that the tradition started when sword fighting was in
vogue. Supposedly, it is difficult for a sword to cut through silk,
so warriors wore silk scarves around their necks. Now, having been
raised in the warrior class of our country, I can appreciate that,
but to stylize the practice for corporate warfare leaves alot to
be desired.
Hi Vivian. You should have known better than to think that the
Army can take a joke. (You wouldn't have any pictures would you?)
Craig
|
224.29 | | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Wed Aug 26 1987 13:48 | 50 |
| Re: Question 1
I shave infrequently in the summer. I've noticed that if my armpits
are kept moderately 'close' the combination of sweat and deodorant
doesn't stain my light blouses. My husband also shaves his armpits
in summer for the same reason--to help preserve his wardrobe.
Re: Question 2
It's been great for my morale to hear from others of you who are
'immodest' in the locker room! I refused, even as a young girl,
to conform to a standard of behavior that seemed silly. Even though
I wasn't trying to force anyone else to conform to my behavior, (i.e.,
not yanking their towels off, taunting their shyness) I was treated
with shocked hostility by the other girls for walking naked to
the shower with my washcloth-sized towel over my arm instead of
struggling to wrap it around me. (There was a practical consideration
here as well as ease with my own body--I was quite hefty as a teenager
and those towels were so ridiculously small I couldn't even pretend
to cover myself up with them.)
I came to understand that many other girls (and now women) are shy
about revealing their bodies anywhere, but as a young girl and even
a sexually awakening teenager I couldn't understand why. I now
have a better intellectual grasp of possible reasons, some of which
have been touched on in this note. Perhaps comparison fear is one
cause; perhaps (and this is more sobering) the general subtle fear
that causes most women to be so careful even extends to female-only
facilities. Peraps not many women feel safe even there, but always
on-guard against possible marauders.
What has not been pleasant (for me) is other girls and women treating
me as if I were a crude slut for not also 'behaving shy'. I am
not fearful in locker rooms or showers, and I behave as if my
nakedness is completely natural (which it is, in the shower or the
locker room, while undressing). But after putting on my glasses
(which I'm blind without) I catch at least one woman giving me
what I've come to call The Look--that all but screams "How can you
just walk around like _that_?? Have you no decent feelings?? How
dare you just let other people see you, look at you??" When I was
a teenager, well-meaning friends actually took me aside to tell
me such things. No one says anything as an adult, but The Look
is the same. I've seen it directed at other 'immodest' women
using shower or locker facilities.
It makes me sad that I have only twice caught a Look that says,
"Look at that strong, proud woman! Oh, I'd love to be at ease
with my body like that; I'd love to be fearless like her."
Marcia
|
224.30 | | CIPHER::VERGE | | Thu Aug 27 1987 10:36 | 18 |
| Re: Shaving: I shave my underarms frequently in the summer; it
does save the old clothes. I shove my legs less frequently; they
itch in hot weather. When the cooler weather arrives, I shave my
legs infrequently, and wear whatever color pantyhose or whatever
that I chose. My hair is light-colored, and I supposed that does
make it less obvious.
As to walking around a dressing room, shower, etc.: If I'm going
to take a shower, why would I put on something?????? Having been
raised in an envirnment where you covered absolutely everything,
over the years my attitude has changed; I don't mind my body, so
why should someone else? Also, like Marcia, those towels *NEVER*
have fit around me, so what difference does it make? I'm for doing
whatever suits the individual.
Hi, Marcia!
Val Verge
|
224.31 | ye olde puritan | LUDWIG::DAUGHAN | sassy | Thu Aug 27 1987 23:09 | 12 |
| it has taken me a long time to be able walk around naked(in locker
rooms etc...)
dont know why it used to make me feel uncomfortable because my mother
always walked around naked in front of me when i was a child.i
remember one comment she made"how else are you going to learn about
your body".
i have one question which may be viewed as strange.how many of you
ever saw both your parents nude?in talking with friends they seemed
to find it "strange" that i had never seen my father nude.
kelly
|
224.32 | puritan also | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Thu Aug 27 1987 23:18 | 5 |
| Kelly, I certainly never remember seeing either of my parents
undressed - tho I did share the bathroom with my mother when
she or I were using the facility. I don't know any women who
have ever told me that they saw their fathers undressed.
Bonnie
|
224.33 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | Not another learning experience! | Fri Aug 28 1987 10:00 | 11 |
| I never saw my father naked except once.
I was going to school late for some reason, and was sitting on my bed
in my room waiting for my mother. I was facing the hall and the
bathroom. My dad was showering, and he came out of the bathroom nude
and headed for the bedroom. He didn't think I was home.
He was really angry at me for sitting there "when I shouldn't have
been there".
Holly
|
224.34 | strange but true | LEZAH::BOBBITT | face piles of trials with smiles | Fri Aug 28 1987 12:34 | 17 |
| please don't think my family was perverted, but...
My parents used to wander to and from the bathroom to shower - without
clothes. They'd use the bathroom with the door open. There were
no hangups. They calmly answered the anatomical questions that
cropped up. Oddly enough, after reaching a certain age, I am now
the one who closes the door to the bathroom, who turns away when
dressing, who needs to wear a bathrobe to the shower. I have acquired
these habits from my college peers, and from society. I am concerned
what others think when they see my body, and I am ashamed of its
imperfections sometimes - in the gym showers - in the locker room
- and with my own roommates.
*sigh*
-Jody
|
224.35 | One fool's loss. . . | CYBORG::MALLETT | | Fri Aug 28 1987 15:25 | 18 |
| re: .22 et al:
I'd just arrived at my duty station in Germany and was sightseeing
in town with a couple other GIs when one of them made a comment
on the order of "Wow! Look at that chick! What a fox!. . .Oh,
wait a minute. . .never mind. . .did you see the hair on those
legs??"
Well, yeah, (sez me to myself), I did, but its only hair, and
it's not "disgusting", just different, and mostly I see a very
attractive woman (drool, pant). To my great delight, I found that
the standard American male aversion to women's body hair prevented
them from wanting to date these young ladies.
Leaving lots more opportunites for me (oinker that I am, er was -
in those days, I wasn't "easy", I was "instant").
Steve
|
224.36 | Modesty? What's modesty? | SQM::K_COLLINS | | Mon Aug 31 1987 08:40 | 21 |
| I agree with Jodi (-.2) that society tends to dictate behaviour
in the shower. I find that I just can't be as modest as the average
person in the showers at work or at a health facility, because,
as most of you can identify, I just don't have the time to fool
around.
I reminds me of basic training in the Air Force many years ago.
We were 30+ girls/women from various backgrounds who, for the first
few days were extremely modest in the shared latrine; however, the
schedule during basic training did not permit this for long. When
you realize that you have 8 minutes to get up, shower, dress, put
on lipstick (we HAD to wear it - silly, huh?), make the bed, tidy
up and be out in front of the building (in order, of course) - and,
believe me, we ACTUALLY DID that - 8 minutes flat! - modesty flys
right out the window. NOWHERE in the world will you see two or
more women using the SAME shower nozzel - in cooperation, even.
That's real teamwork!
Thank God it's over.
Kathy
|
224.37 | Ex Nav | BRUTWO::MTHOMSON | Why re-invent the wheel | Mon Aug 31 1987 14:50 | 3 |
| Thank the goddess another woman vet welcome..Ex nav..
MaggieT
|
224.38 | but my recruiter said... | IMAGIN::KOLBE | Stuck in the middle again | Wed Sep 02 1987 00:53 | 11 |
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Oh god, I'm another. I recall a girl from basic who just refused to
take a shower with the rest of us cause we wouldn't let her use the
shower curtain (hey, we had to wash and dry them if used them).
one day I'lll start a topic on just how much I hated basic training.
I mean, who gives a s**t if their hangers are exactly one inch apart.
liesl
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224.39 | | SQM::K_COLLINS | | Wed Sep 02 1987 10:53 | 4 |
| Hey, liesl, don't look now, but I STILL fold my undies the Air Farce
way! Ya, and I can still get dressed in the dark. ;^>
Kathy
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224.40 | You'll never get rich | CYBORG::MALLETT | | Wed Sep 02 1987 11:54 | 23 |
| re: 38, et al:
While there are moments when I think that either men or women
are extraterrestrials (the one utterly alien to the other), I'm
brought back (to Earth, so to speak) by notes like these.
Your experiences sound almost genderless. While we didn't have
shower curtains (which we wouldn't have used for the same reasons),
we did have a recruit who wouldn't shower with us. Trouble was
that in any given training day, there were about 6.5 minutes
available for showering, thus our "buddy" began to raise quite
a stink - literally - and prompted us to give him a GI shower.
And why does my wife think I'm nuts for folding my T-shirts folded
just so?
Please do start that note on Basic Training; hatred of Basic may
be one of the few things we can agree upon unanimously.
Stand at ease,
Steve
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224.41 | Modesty loves company | PARITY::TROTT | Cereal Killer | Thu Sep 03 1987 15:10 | 27 |
| I always got a "modesty attack" when I was forced into the old
"group shower" routine in my high school gym days. To this day I am still
very uncomfortable in that type of setting and I can't really say why. It
just feels so "unnatural" or something. Funny, it should be the other way
around but I guess I have let the pressure of society get to me. Anyway,
it is not a problem any more since I am no longer "forced" into a"group
shower" situation.
I guess another thing is that (and this may sound "weird") I am
somewhat grossed out by the sight of another guy in the buff. That was always
another problem I had in the "group shower" days. It was always a challenge
trying to keep from getting glimpses of the other big hairy bodies that I
shared the shower with! Yuk! Weird maybe, but that is the way I am. It tends
to keep me out of the restroom with the shower in it around lunch time!
On hair: I am one of those "traditional" (in this sense anyway)
American males who would rather not see hairy legs and armpits on women
but I certainly recognize any persons right to do whatever they want and
it won't bother me. And I am *not* the type that would stare or make a
comment to anyone either! I don't have any double standards however (as
in: hair in certain places is okay for men and not for women). Actually,
I once shaved a moustache for an SO who found it "uncomfortable". I really
do *hate* shaving myself but I don't like the feeling I get when I have
a beard either (I have tried!) so I guess I am stuck with another routine
that I find unpleasent. Oh well.
- Dale the male -
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224.42 | I HATE to shave | PATSPK::STPIERRE | | Tue Sep 08 1987 16:45 | 13 |
| I hate to shave. So in the summertime, I shave my legs if I'm going
to wear shorts or a bathing suit, and usually will shave under my
arms regularly. However, once the cooler weather sets in, I very
rarely shave. I don't think about the way it looks. I wear nylons
and believe it covers it up. It doesn't bother my husband one way
or the other.
As for modesty, I am one of the modest type. Except around a few
close friends, when in high school I dreaded gym. I still feel
uncomfortable around other woman, although the feeling is not as
bad as when I was younger.
Debbie
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224.43 | Theres a vets file too | STING::BARBER | Skyking Tactical Services | Mon Sep 14 1987 13:44 | 8 |
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RE .36, .37, .38
FWIW Theres a veterans file over on node UCOUNT::VETERANS
that been seking female vets. It would be nice to see you over
there.
Bob B USNR - R (Still serving)
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