Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m Asian. Still waiting to be “on trend”.![]()
Oh, you have been with a subset of white men for QUITE some time! They love nothing more than telling their blonde haired, blue eyed friends and family how totally inferior they are to you in every imaginable way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m Asian. Still waiting to be “on trend”.![]()
You are “on trend” now, I believe. Asians are considered widely attractive and my daughters wish they had the same hair as their Asian friends.
The hair..but not the eye shape/size .
That is why eye surgery is so common in Asia.
It is sad
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am 50 and I have luscious brown hair that is long. I also have brown eyes. I have a beautiful hair color and beautiful eye color.
People stare at me all the time. People used to stare at me when I was 20, 30, 40. Here in the U.S.
Two years ago I was in Rome, eyes were turning wherever I walked. My then 17-year-old DD turned eyes left and right too. She participated in a Dolce Vita event on Via Veneto.
I dare you to tell me I am not a standard of beauty. Your green-eyed monster can be nothing but scared of my confidence in my mind and my looks.
love your confidence 8
confidence??
That's not how that comes across, sock puppet
I know, but it was seriously funny. Narcissists do live in a alternate reality though.
I've never seen such a beauty on the streets that everyone turned their heads, oh...maybe in the movies.
Anonymous wrote:My DD (half Indian, half Caucasian) definitely stereotypes blondes. She thinks they aren’t very nice! She assumed they are mean. Here I was telling her not judge people until you know them...but in this case I’m urging her to be open minded toward blondes. She rolled her eyes and had an “ok, mom, but I doubt it” expression
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m Asian. Still waiting to be “on trend”.![]()
You are “on trend” now, I believe. Asians are considered widely attractive and my daughters wish they had the same hair as their Asian friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP you repost a variant on this every few months. Get therapy.
OP is constantly bashing white people in different threads. She clearly needs help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am 50 and I have luscious brown hair that is long. I also have brown eyes. I have a beautiful hair color and beautiful eye color.
People stare at me all the time. People used to stare at me when I was 20, 30, 40. Here in the U.S.
Two years ago I was in Rome, eyes were turning wherever I walked. My then 17-year-old DD turned eyes left and right too. She participated in a Dolce Vita event on Via Veneto.
I dare you to tell me I am not a standard of beauty. Your green-eyed monster can be nothing but scared of my confidence in my mind and my looks.
love your confidence 8
confidence??
That's not how that comes across, sock puppet
Anonymous wrote:I’m Asian. Still waiting to be “on trend”.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m going to disagree with posters up thread — I’ve been blonde and brunette, and get no more or less compliments with either one. You know what gets me compliments? Red hair. And I think the reason is what others have noted- people like novelty and they praise things that are different. So when my hair is red (it looks pretty natural on me) people are more interested in my specialness. Being a brunette isn’t special. Neither is being a bottle blonde.
So if people praise natural blonde, blue-eyed people, sure, there is probably some latent racism there. But I tend to think that at this point, it’s just people being interested in this somewhat rare recessive trait (at least blue eyes are recessive like red hair, not sure about blonde ness). That’s my experience with having red hair— people assume you have this trait that is getting less and less common and that’s appealing.
Red is reviled around the world. A “ginger” is derogatory. There are some pretty harsh shades. Some are orange. Some are very brassy.
When I lived in a S. America red heads were thought as devils. In the UK, lower class.
I think people have very strong reactions to red hair: either despise it or love it.
They usually need a lot of sunscreen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am 50 and I have luscious brown hair that is long. I also have brown eyes. I have a beautiful hair color and beautiful eye color.
People stare at me all the time. People used to stare at me when I was 20, 30, 40. Here in the U.S.
Two years ago I was in Rome, eyes were turning wherever I walked. My then 17-year-old DD turned eyes left and right too. She participated in a Dolce Vita event on Via Veneto.
I dare you to tell me I am not a standard of beauty. Your green-eyed monster can be nothing but scared of my confidence in my mind and my looks.
love your confidence 8
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s all a form of misogyny at the end of the day.
This! End of thread.
+1 million! Keep the ladies arguing about who is the prettiest and they won't noticed the incessant bs men are getting away with.