I got mad and wrote about my imaginary evil twin.
Content warnings: Icky culty gender stuff. My father always wanted a little blonde daughter. That’s a direct quote. He always phrased it jus
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I got mad and wrote about my imaginary evil twin.
Content warnings: Icky culty gender stuff. My father always wanted a little blonde daughter. That’s a direct quote. He always phrased it jus

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I now think a White woman's choice to lighten her hair color does have larger political implications, as does a decision to pop blue contact lens in eyes that are brown or hazel. With consciousness comes responsibility. That is, I may still choose to lighten my hair color because I think it looks better. Ultimately, I suppose that's a personal decision. But I also have to accept that in so doing, I'm contributing to a larger statistical trend of more White women lightening their hair than darkening it. White women like myself must ask ourselves, "Do we want to be part of a problem having to do with the preferencing of Aryan-like features, or do we want to work towards a possible solution of eliminating biases in perceptions of beauty?"
A Whiter Shade of Pale
Since only about 2 percent of the world has naturally blonde hair, being blonde is a choice, and the means used to get there can be very easy to read. As can the choice of which sort of blonde, precisely, one wishes to be. (via The Politics of Blondness, From Aphrodite to Ivanka)
Hair dye and the hidden history of postwar America. (via True Colors | The New Yorker)
Just 2 percent of the world’s population and 5 percent of white people in the U.S. have blond hair, but 35 percent of female U.S. senators and 48 percent of female CEOs at S&P 500 companies are blond. (via Why are female CEOs and senators disproportionately blond? Blame sexism.)
See also 4 Women On How Going Blonde Changed Their Lives & Careers

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
One of the terms we’re using is complicit freedom. We’re all capable of making this choice and doing what we want, but what happens when what we want matches up with a kind of complicity around what is valued? (via In “Stamped,” Claudia Rankine and John Lucas Examine Blonde Hair in Terms of Race, Privilege, and Desire | Vogue)
For more info see also What Does It Mean To Choose To Dye Your Hair Blonde? on NPR
Happy belated birthday beautiful soul!!!! I love you so much!!!!!! You always bring me so much joy and I’m so thankful to call you my friend 🥰 I hope you had a wonderful day filled with lots of love and laughter and Stone pics… here’s some more for good measure 😁❤️💖❤️💖
You're so sweet and you bring me so much joy as well. It was a fantastic day surrounded by those I love who made me feel very special. Thanks Liz 💖