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Common meanings, I’ll grant, but I have long been under the impression that very few things are truly universal when it comes to human interaction.
No single, universal meaning, no. But I don’t think it’s impossible to approach a few different universal meanings, according to circumstance.
I don’t want my hair shoulder length, my ideal hair length would be approximately enough to cover my ears or so. Which is unfortunately exactly when it gets at its most unruly.
Anyhow, I think my point when this all began is that there is no universal meaning. I’m not confident that I was saying that, but it seem like a good guess. So, is that fair to say?
I hate how Shia Labeouf can grow a better beard than me.
Growing out your hair a lot instead of a little should (probably) fix your problem. One of my classmates at the growing-out phase simply couldn’t get over how bad my hair looked.
Back on subject: If it’s as annoying a process for girls to grow their long (again) as it is for guys, then other things it could mean are lack of forethought, or inexperience with growing one’s hair long (those early days of childhood where girls grow their hair long are easy to forget), or that they have a reason that is worth more than avoiding the bother of growing one’s hair long again.
Short hair could also indicate conformity or nonconformity, according the fashion of the time and place.
True enough, but gender is the subject and race is not. This time, anyhow.
Hair can also just behave differently on an individual level. That said, my point is that you can’t say that a man’s hair will behave one way and a woman’s hair will behave another.
Also, I hate not being able to grow my hair out even a little without winding up looking like I’ve never heard of a comb before, but that’s a personal issue.
I just braid mine. That always gets it in line.
Hair might not behave differently according to gender, but it certainly does according to race. I certainly can’t grow an afro.
Or their hair just starts misbehaving when it gets long. Mine does that. Granted, I’m a dude, but I don’t believe a strand of human hair behaves differently depending on the gender of the person it’s attached to.
But what could if plausibly mean? For, say, a substantial set of girls cutting their hair short?
Practicality for physically intensive jobs comes to mind as one potential reason. Laziness is another.
It’s hard to say, because the haircut wouldn’t necessarily represent the same choice for everyone who gets it.
I agree that she is the same person (barring some minor, unconscious feedback on her self-image). But isn’t she attempting to “choose” to be a - slightly - different person, as the image implies? I suppose the sentence doesn’t explicitly associate the haircut with the choice, but that’s how I read it.
Usually the same person she was except with shorter hair.
Then it probably means cancer. But let’s try another tack here: Who is it a girl chooses to be when she cuts her hair short?
@AlsoSprachOdin
I wonder what I said, here. Can’t remember.
You’re right, femenism IS a joke.
Well, Tumblrfems need to be reminded that Equality was their original goal, not supremacy.
Forgive me.
But this being the internet I honestly don’t know.
Just because “female stereotype” does not mean that “female stereotype” is true.
Usually yeah. They did it right in the early 1900s when it was fashionable. Nowadays girls clothes don’t seem to suit that style.