Anonymous wrote:OP did you marry your wife for the person she is or for her hair?
Also, to the One PP accusing the other about making it all about them: you would be surprised how many men attach long hair as some requisite of feminity" and loathe it on their wives, regardless of how good shorter hair may look on them.
Now, OP, here's my two cents: communicate with your wife. Maybe she loves her new shorter hair. As a woman who went from very long hair to a pixie cut and loved it, I'll say this: having short hair can make a woman feel very empowered and stylish. Because *You* don't like it doesn't mean that she doesn't feel fabulous, and before you lodge your opinion /complain, please take some time to explore how she feels. She may be inching shorter because she knows you prefer the longer hair, but SHE likes it shorter.
Also take some time to explore your ow bias. Is it that you prefer the longer hair on her, or that you tie it to femininity, etc.
I don't think men know or appreciate how much a new hairstyle can make a woman feel fabulous.
Anonymous wrote:I've seen too many women grow out their hair (and lose weight) after divorces to believe the "oh, it just doesn't look good past a certain age" rationale.
When "looking attractive to men" is a primary goal for a woman, the hair tends to stay longer. When that's not a goal, the hair often goes away. It's mostly just a matter of priorities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've seen too many women grow out their hair (and lose weight) after divorces to believe the "oh, it just doesn't look good past a certain age" rationale.
When "looking attractive to men" is a primary goal for a woman, the hair tends to stay longer. When that's not a goal, the hair often goes away. It's mostly just a matter of priorities.
Maybe they got hair extensions. Healthy hair takes a while to grow out naturally.
Also, a woman who bleaches and straightens her hair is going to have damaged hair eventually.
Shorter hair makes some women look younger. That is why older women often cut their hair. Sometimes hair breaks and it just won't grow any longer.
Anonymous wrote:I've seen too many women grow out their hair (and lose weight) after divorces to believe the "oh, it just doesn't look good past a certain age" rationale.
When "looking attractive to men" is a primary goal for a woman, the hair tends to stay longer. When that's not a goal, the hair often goes away. It's mostly just a matter of priorities.
Anonymous wrote:I've seen too many women grow out their hair (and lose weight) after divorces to believe the "oh, it just doesn't look good past a certain age" rationale.
When "looking attractive to men" is a primary goal for a woman, the hair tends to stay longer. When that's not a goal, the hair often goes away. It's mostly just a matter of priorities.
Anonymous wrote:I've seen too many women grow out their hair (and lose weight) after divorces to believe the "oh, it just doesn't look good past a certain age" rationale.
When "looking attractive to men" is a primary goal for a woman, the hair tends to stay longer. When that's not a goal, the hair often goes away. It's mostly just a matter of priorities.
Anonymous wrote:I know I am stepping into a landmine, but here goes:
My DW is a beautiful woman, she is as beautiful to me as the day we met. Lately, she has been coming home from the salon with shorter and shorter hair. To be brutally honest here (since we are anonymous) I don't think it looks good on her in general, and I don't like how she looks with short hair. Part of me thinks I should do the typical "you look great honey!" when she comes back, but then again, if I were doing something that was a turn-off for her that I could fix - like growing a beard she didn't like - I would want her to tell me.
Is it as simple as saying "I love your hair, but I think you look sexier when it is longer?"