Published January 08, 2009 10:29 pm - Getting rid of unwanted hair growth often is a private matter.
Electrolysis helps fight unwanted hair
By Jean Lundquist
Special to The Free Press
MANKATO
—
Virginia Flitter doesn’t get a lot of customers by word-of-mouth.
So, in some ways, it’s not surprising that after being in business for 18 years, a lot of people still haven’t heard of her.
Flitter owns Electrolysis and Laser Center on Belle Avenue and is a certified professional electrologist. “It’s such a
personal thing,” Flitter knows from experience, “that people just don’t talk about it.”
Electrolysis has been in use as a means of hair reduction for 100 years, according to Flitter, and has been available in Mankato since 1964. Electrolysis is a means of removing unwanted hair growth one hair at a time.
A small electrical probe is slid into the hair follicle, which emits a small amount of heat to kill the follicle’s ability to grow hair. The fix is not quick, and for some, it’s not easy. Progress sometimes depends on a person’s pain tolerance, though others fall asleep during the procedure.
Also, the follicle is not killed with just one treatment, though it grows weaker with each one. Flitter advises her clients to expect to spend two years in electrolysis on average. Once started, it’s important to keep up with the treatments to make steady progress.
It’s not a one-time fix. Flitter says she was diagnosed with polycystic ovarian disease 31 years ago. A symptom of the disease is excessive hair growth, especially noticeable on the face.
She went through 12 years of electrolysis to defeat that symptom. At the time of her diagnosis, doctors told her to shave and wear darker makeup, as nothing else could be done.
Finally, one doctor asked her if she would consider electrolysis. She had never heard the word. Though it took time, electrolysis worked for her. That’s when she decided to train to offer the service.
“If I could help one person not go through what I went through, it would be worth it,” she said.
Flitter says many of her clients who seek electrolysis describe it as a life-changing process.
“I’ve touched a lot of lives,” she says.
Electrolysis is not cheap. Over a couple of years, the electrolysis and laser treatments for the average person will amount to at least a couple of thousand dollars. People need to look at it as an investment, she said.
Flitter has some advice for anyone, male or female, with unwanted hair. The first is, “Don’t tweeze.” When hairs are plucked out, there is often scar tissue that forms beneath the surface of the skin. That means more electrolysis treatments will be needed.