Anonymous wrote:It's all women and gay men telling women to cut their hair. There is some kind of social pressure on women, from other women, to cut their hair -- telling them "you're too old for that." I still contend the number of men telling a woman "you look sexier with the bob" is very rare. Not so rare is the husband who comes home to find his wife with a sexless bob because she chose her friend's opinion over his when the friend said "the bob would look so cute" and the husband said "I prefer when you have long hair."
And if thinning hair is a reason it looks bad as women hit 45 and 50, it still doesn't explain the number of women who get the mommy-bob soon after they get married -- a late 20s, early 30s phenomenon.
Anonymous wrote:Trust me, long hair adds 10 years to my face. Visible layers just ebd up as a poofy Rachael. Only a well cut bob really works.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you prefer messy long hair that "Mommy" has no time to style over a bob? Or equally bad?
Personally - I prefer long messy hair. Also, I've heard that bobs aren't necessarily easy to maintain when compared to pulling long hair into a pony tail.
It's not about styling, although time is important too. It's a simple fact that hair - yes, ours as well as yours - thins with age. At 45, very few women have enough hair to look good with hair past their shoulders. They exist. But they are a minority. And I personally find long and obviously thinning hair a turnoff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not reading through seven pages of comments, but I assume a few other guys already said it:
Stay within 10-15 lbs of your original weight when we met.
Maintain the same sex schedule.
Say exactly what is on your mind in as few figurative terms as possible.
Don't use the kids as an excuse to not do the above.
So many people see those three things as cliched but that's only because it's what we really care about.
Agree. At heart, men are truly simple creatures.
Anonymous wrote:Do you prefer messy long hair that "Mommy" has no time to style over a bob? Or equally bad?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd rather be on my own and comfortable in my own skin than contort myself into someone else's ideal that always feels like a lot of work.
I can see your future... I see... no men, but lots of cats...
Anonymous wrote:Just read where a lot of brides grow their hair out long for the wedding then cut their hair short (pixie or bob) not long after the wedding. Don't do that. It's the ultimate symbol of "he's locked down, I don't have to give a shit anymore."
These women clearly know the bob doesn't look good -- otherwise, they'd be cutting their hair before the wedding. They just don't care about being attractive once the marriage is sealed.
Anonymous wrote:Do you prefer messy long hair that "Mommy" has no time to style over a bob? Or equally bad?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you prefer messy long hair that "Mommy" has no time to style over a bob? Or equally bad?
Personally - I prefer long messy hair. Also, I've heard that bobs aren't necessarily easy to maintain when compared to pulling long hair into a pony tail.
Anonymous wrote:Man here. Leaving out the emotional stuff and focusing just one simple physical thing people may not think of:
Wear your hair down and keep it long. When you come back from the hairdresser, you look amazing. I have no idea what they do there, but don't go back to putting your hair up every day thereafter. Wear it down and in the style they did it in -- it looks great.
Anonymous wrote:Do you prefer messy long hair that "Mommy" has no time to style over a bob? Or equally bad?
Anonymous wrote:The bob aversion is bullshit. I was a working model in my teens and into my 20s. I had to keep my hair at chin length or else o would book as many jobs. My face is long and it rounded me out a bit. I lived in the beauty industry every single day. A haircut should complement the shape of your face. Period.
Anonymous wrote:The bob aversion is bullshit. I was a working model in my teens and into my 20s. I had to keep my hair at chin length or else o would book as many jobs. My face is long and it rounded me out a bit. I lived in the beauty industry every single day. A haircut should complement the shape of your face. Period.