I am a natural blonde - and never had any complaints.
2006-06-24 03:25:30
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answer #1
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answered by doc 6
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Every likes a different type. I am a redhead, so are my two of my stepsisters. You will be glad to know that in 250 years or so the natural blondes will be gone. Because of Genes and the huge amound of dark haired people in the whole world they dark haired gene will predominate the globe and will soon "over come" all the blonde genes in the world. Like you said there aren't very many Natural blondes out there anymiore, in 250 years every blonde you see will be from the bottle. Those blondes out there dying their hair, don't they realize that their dark eyebrows give them away, and the hair roots...oh my gosh, gotta keep up with the hair growth or you so ignorant, can't THEY see for themselves their roots are showing?
2006-06-21 13:24:18
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answer #2
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answered by Fays Daze 3
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I have blonde hair. I dyed my hair red (usually though other colors did come about, too) for 6 years. I stopped dying my hair because... I do not think there is really any reason for me to be "embarassed" about something such as a hair color.
I'm really not sure what the bleach blonde thing is about, but I do: conformity. That is what's hot now (or going out of style) therefore how many people will decide to look. Unfortunely trends leave everyone looking a little too similiar, which causes the trends to fade out.
2006-06-21 13:22:22
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answer #3
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answered by anonymous 1
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As the leading scholar of blond studies, Joanna Pitman provides us with the best collection of statistics, history, prehistory, and commentary on the subject. Her book offers an evolutionary psychology explanation for the hair color's timeless allure: We associate blond with youth, she writes, because the hair of babies and that of young children tends to become wan and darken with age. Pitman notes blond women appear younger and thus more fertile, winning them an evolutionary advantage over brunettes. Blond hair "also softens facial lines and is flattering to mature faces," she attests, which explains why many women hit the bottle.
Pitman reports in her book that Elizabeth I, when she was in her late 50s, went from graying auburn to golden blond for the Armada Portrait thanks to a wig. Blond hair "emphasized the queen's uncorrupted and untouchable virginity," writes Pitman, and allowed her to remain England's fairest maiden. While alive, Elizabeth encouraged comparisons between her and the Virgin Mary, who, like many goddesses and saints, was routinely painted in blond curls.
Anthropologist Grant McCracken advanced the idea of a "blondness periodic table" in his 1995 book Big Hair: A Journey Into the Transformation of Self.
Myself, I'm actually blonde but it's rather mousy and dishwater blonde. I dye it with henna to give it a nice red hue.
In the mating game, we are all faking in more ways than one.
Hope this helps give you some insight into why some people tend to prefer blondes.
2006-06-21 13:29:06
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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leave them alone it makes us look better. just kidding but a while back guys liked the "dumb blond" routine i guess it just stuck the artificial intelligence thing me I'm a red head i streak my bangs blonde but only because i like it
2006-06-22 14:33:20
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answer #5
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answered by charlee 2
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r u hating on all the blondes?
im a natural blonde but i dyed my hair.
now it's like a dirty blondeish color.
2006-06-21 13:18:43
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answer #6
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answered by Haley 2
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I know! thats messed up-especially all the chinese girls dying their hair blonde, no offense or anything, i'm not racist, just stating the facts.
2006-06-22 17:09:06
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answer #7
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answered by augustbabe 2
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I agree. I think it's crazy.
2006-06-21 13:18:04
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answer #8
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answered by *AstrosChick* 5
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Well, better for me, then.
2006-06-21 13:27:15
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answer #9
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answered by Quiet Amusement 4
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