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Chest hair where there was none before at the age of 35?

2007-05-11 03:16:09 · 12 answers · asked by E15 3 in Health Men's Health

12 answers

Some say when you get older, everything slips down! I never had chest hair until after college (and it seems to be about the same amount I lost from the top of my head), so apparently you're not alone.

2007-05-11 09:30:05 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The body is an amazing thing. I have heard of people growing after age 25! We cannot question just except the changes. I don't think there is any answer other than our bodies do what they do. Enjoy your new found nest. I am sure the ladies will!

2007-05-11 10:19:50 · answer #2 · answered by To live is to learn 3 · 0 0

Not uncommon I know men who's beard at 34 is just filling in completly than it did they they where younger. Hair it a tricky thing and is dependant on everyone individual body's. How you made any huge changes lost a lot of wieght, started eating healthy? It's just hair

2007-05-11 11:07:09 · answer #3 · answered by Roger B 3 · 0 0

Who told you 35? It's puberty it happens in the teens! Puberty refers to the process of physical changes by which a child's body becomes an adult body capable of reproduction. Growth accelerates in the first half of puberty and reaches completion by the end. Body differences between boys and girls before puberty are almost entirely restricted to the genitalia. During puberty major differences of size, shape, composition, and function develop in many body structures and systems. The most obvious of these are referred to as secondary sex characteristics. In a strict sense, the term puberty (and this article) refers to the bodily changes of sexual maturation rather than the psychosocial and cultural aspects of adolescent development.

Adolescence is the period of psychological and social transition between childhood and adulthood. Adolescence largely overlaps the period of puberty but its boundaries are less precisely defined and it refers as much to the psychosocial and cultural characteristics of development during the teen years as to the physical changes of puberty. Children and young adolescents near the average age of puberty are sometimes referred to as peripubescent in medical literature.

2007-05-11 10:20:01 · answer #4 · answered by wolfmano 7 · 0 1

You are getting old. Expect to get hairier. I now have hair growing all kinds of odd places. My wife plucks them. Unfortunately, it has left my head.

If you let it go, you will end up looking like Dan Hedeya or Robin Williams.

2007-05-11 10:19:37 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Late bloomer - everyone develops at different times. Soon you will be getting ear hair - wooohoo won't that be fun.

Nothing out of the ordinary to worry about.

2007-05-11 10:19:30 · answer #6 · answered by Justice 2 · 1 0

lol, my mom always said that as men get older the hair falls out of their head and implants everywhere else (thats why really old men are hairy but bald - and why grandpa had really hairy ears and nose - lol)

2007-05-11 10:19:24 · answer #7 · answered by mickey g 6 · 0 0

for the same reason I am sprouting back hairs. when we get older, we grow ugly (or uglier)

2007-05-11 10:20:27 · answer #8 · answered by gufodotto 2 · 0 0

You been eating too many sprouts

2007-05-11 10:19:05 · answer #9 · answered by jackie j 2 · 0 0

Few more years and you will have some growing out of your ears....

2007-05-11 10:19:37 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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