




They'll think "Yippee she's naked!!!"one day if I ever have a partner again, I'm so nervous what they might think
DH husband calls mine my "zebra stripes"karen wrote:They'll think "Yippee she's naked!!!"one day if I ever have a partner again, I'm so nervous what they might think![]()
I've had mine since I was a kid too- once they turn silver there isn't much you can do with them without a lot of medical intervention. I prefer to think of them as racing stripes
Perhaps not the healthiest method, but i noticed mine "bleached out" (from purple to white) in the summer at the beach after i got burnt. I really hated laying out in a bikini as a young teen with all my new zebra stripes going down my legs, but when they turned white i felt better. (of course, now i know that the best chance to minimize them is to treat them when they're still purple. lol) i'm pretty light skinned to begin with so my white stripes aren't that obvious. Bob (hubby) doesn't seem to mind them one bit, and knowing that their existence means i didn't end up a midget seems like a fair trade to me(i was really rather undersized at the time. I remember using the kitchen sink at one point during the growth spurt and realizing that the edge of the sink wasn't under my arm pits anymore and it was nice). I'm happy with my body, and I own the(many) scars the come with it. I earned those scars! lolzeebs wrote:Also re: the turning silver thing, mine were silver/white when I was in my early 20's, but they've actually become less prominent with time, so I would say don't throw in the towel, just keep at keeping the skin healthy and persistence may pay off. It has for me.