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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
World
Tom Ball & Zoe Forsey

Bearded pole dancer reveals how men react to her 'unusual appearance' on first dates

A pole dancer who spent decades plucking and shaving her facial hair because she was so embarrassed of her "unusual look" is now proudly showing off her new beard.

Hope Schmerfeld decided enough was enough after breaking up with her boyfriend of 15 years and embraced her natural look.

The 38-year-old first noticed the facial hair, which is caused by polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), when she was just 14 and was badly bullied at school.

Her mum Cynthia tried everything she could to help, taking her for waxes and electrolysis treatment, but nothing worked.

Hope, who lives in Oklahoma City, USA, said: "For years I was weighed down by the shame of my unusual appearance.

Hope claims she now loves her beard (PA Real Life)

"But recently I realised that actually for all those years I hadn't been hiding my beard for myself, but for the sake of other people. I was controlled by what society had set as the standard of what a woman should look like.

"It's been a real journey of rediscovery and self-acceptance for me."

The mum-of-one, who now pole dances as a hobby, but performed professionally until five years ago, told her closest friends about her condition but kept it secret from men she dated.

She even hide it from her partner, who she met in 2003 while working as a pole dancer in a club, for a year,  until she finally confessed why she spent so long in the bathroom.

She used to pole dance professional but now just does it as a hobby (PA Real Life)

She said: "When I told him about it he was understanding. But he said he was still glad that I got rid of the hair.

"I was constantly in fear of anybody noticing a hair on my face or spotting a patch that I had maybe missed.

"I remember often just zoning out throughout entire conversations with people, when the thought suddenly came into my head that there was stubble on my face.

"I was always in a state of deep shame."

But when her relationship sadly began to collapse earlier this year, Hope decided that enough was enough and that she would no longer live in fear of her beard being exposed.

She used to spend hours in the bathroom dealing with the unwanted hair (PA Real Life)

"I was going through a very big upheaval as my relationship with my partner began to disintegrate and I was reevaluating my life a lot," she said.

"But I read a book by British bearded model Harnaam Kaur, in which she talks about her decision to stop shaving, and it really had an impact on me."

Going without a morning shave for the first time on April 15, while she found the first couple of weeks "tough" and felt people's stares piercing into her "skin and very essence," she refused to give in.

She quickly learnt to shrug off strangers' gawps and embraced her new look, saying: "I'm finally able to live in the open without feeling ashamed and that gives me such a feeling of liberation and freedom.

"I am in a much better mental state overall than I was before, which makes me wish that I had done this years ago."

Now with eight solid weeks of growth, producing a beard to be proud of, Hope plans to join a travelling circus next year and traverse the country showing off her unique look.

She's had a lot of positive comments from people (PA Real Life)

"I'm really excited to have the opportunity to go on tour with the circus, it's certainly not one that I thought I'd ever get." she said.

"I'm just glad to have the chance to put my shame to rest."

Insisting that she now "loves her beard," she has also received plenty of positive feedback from other hirsute women, who say they admire her confidence and that she is paving the way.

Hope, who works on a mushroom farm and has even started dating again, said: "So far, people have been really nice about my beard.

"Of course, I get a lot of stares, but when people do come up to me and ask things like, 'Are you transsexual?' or, 'Is it real?' they have been very courteous.

"I have been on a few dates too with guys I've met on dating sites.

Hope is now dating again (PA Real Life)

"I'm totally up front about the beard and some guys say, 'Sorry, that's not for me.' But others have been really intrigued by it, with a few complimenting me,  saying 'That's better than anything I could grow!'"

Hope was diagnosed with polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), a condition causing elevated male hormones, which can make people prone to excess facial and body hair, when she was in her late 20s.  

Gradually, as the hair became coarser and sprouted across her entire face, as well as on her chest, nipples and stomach, she developed a grooming ritual that meant she had to get up early, so she could devote two hours to standing in front of the bathroom mirror, plucking her facial hair out.  

Following the birth of her daughter, who she does not wish to name, in 2006, her hairiness got even worse.  

And, keen for someone to identify the cause of her mysterious condition, Hope saw a doctor again in 2015 and had a series of tests.  

To her amazement, after being taunted as a child and teenager for being "manly", she did not have an excess of the male hormone testosterone as she suspected, but rather a deficiency, and was put on a course of drugs to boost it as it would have made her PCOS worse had she not.  

She explained: "I was pretty surprised, as were the doctors who, to this day really don't know what is causing the PCOS which is making me so hairy.  

"It is so mysterious that it's most likely I have a genetic mutation of some sort."  

Making matters worse, the testosterone boosters she was prescribed made her beard even bristlier, forcing her to use a razor instead of tweezering the hairs out.  

Sometimes she was forced to shave twice a day if she was going out in the evening, because of regrowth.

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