short hair

Once I was all about long hair, but my wife's gone shorter and shorter as she ages. When she asks me, I tell her I really like it. What I'm really liking is how it annoys her when it grows back, and last week she set up a standing appointment for every second week. When my hair was on that schedule, it just kept getting shorter. I'd love to see her sides with a #1 buzz. Here's hoping!

Nice. I was with my wife last week and passed a striking woman with fully buzzed hair. I couldn’t quite come up with a good way to say “That is so hot, you should do that!”
 
That's what my bet was. My experience was a bit shy but really loves cock when she gets going. Needs a lot of sex -- often from more than one lover.

I agree with what your saying...she seems to take on a very hot person than before...was rather shocked..but love it...
 
Nice. I was with my wife last week and passed a striking woman with fully buzzed hair. I couldn’t quite come up with a good way to say “That is so hot, you should do that!”

Making suggestions about their hair can be such a minefield! Her appointment was yesterday morning, and the result seemed just a bit shorter than the last time. Maybe that's just wishful thinking. Anyway, I complimented her on the cut as soon as she got home, and that seemed to please her. Let's just see what happens next . . .:D
 
I have a great photo of my mother rocking a "Brooks bob" the same year Louise Brooks posed for John de Mirjian, but I thought I might get in trouble using it. Mom was only 7 at the time; this nude which Louise sued de Mirjian for selling is probably more entertaining, too.

Short hair on American women practically begins with the divine Louise whose easily annoyed mother in 1916 ordered a Kansas City barber to shear her 10-year-old daughter's hair into a "Buster Brown." Mercurial and undisciplined, Brooks became the prototypical Twenties "flapper." A contemporary of Martha Graham with the Denishawn Dance Company - until she was fired and switched to Broadway - "Lulu" was reputed to have been the first to ever dance the "Charleston" in Paris.

Silent-era cameras loved her luminous image, but even pre-code Hollywood tired of her often self-destructive antics. "I was always late," she explained many years later, "but just too damn stunning for them to fire me." Moving to pre-Nazi Germany, she made two landmark films for G.W. Pabst - "Pandora's Box" & "Diary of a Lost Girl" - but Hollywood had pretty much written her off by 1930 and, after the respect she'd received in Germany, she felt much the same about Hollywood.

Those stunning looks and her trademark bob haircut, however, have remained a Hollywood inspiration for years, most notably Cyd Charisse in "Singing in the Rain," Liza Minnelli in "Cabaret" and Uma Thurman in "Pulp Fiction," but just remember this: My mom wore a "Brooks bob" long before Cyd or Liza ever did.

https://bizarrela.com/2016/09/louise-brooks-hollywood-rebel-1926/
 
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