6.It's a myth that when you shave, your pubic hair will grow in thicker.
7.At a certain length (usually relatively short but it's different for everyone), your pubic hair will stop growing.
8.Your pubic hair can be a completely different color than the hair on the rest of your body.
9.Evolutionarily speaking, pubic hair starting to come in signals that puberty and sexual maturation are on their way.
10.Pubes can thin out with age, and some people go completely bald in their genital region.
11.According to all three experts, grooming habits are culturally specific, and within the past few decades people in the US have been grooming their pubes more frequently than in the past.
12.A 2016 study showed that most women who groomed their pubic hair did so for "hygienic purposes" —
but actually, it's more hygienic to have pubes.
13.Also, people in the US who are younger or have sex regularly seem more likely to be concerned with grooming their pubes.
14.Grooming your pubes can cause irritation because it's basically microscopically wounding your skin.
15.Having small abrasions and a super-irritated crotch post–hair removal makes you more susceptible to inflammation and bacterial infection.