Spent another day today wondering why my hair doesn't look like Nicole Kidman's. I mean, I know she probably has 5 hairstylists following her around all the time, but I should think that 1 troll lady could do the work of a half-dozen hairstylists, no problem.
Jen says I am obsessing over my hair and no one notices the frizz, but the point is that I notice it. It's frizzy! It goes every which way! It snaggles and tangles and gets stuck under my collar and I don't notice until much later! And it seems sometimes as if everyone in the world has more control over their hair than I do. Plus the greying thing, which I can't bring myself to do anything about since I know I could never commit to paying the big bucks to get it dyed every 6 weeks.
All I want is for my hair to look like a Pantene ad, dammit!
What's a troll to do?
4 comments:
OK, Ais. You really need something else to obsess about now. You're hair is beautiful and you've been looking more stylish than ever lately. It's unfair to yourself to pick one tiny minute thing about yourself to obsess over, especially when no one else even notices. Come on, troll! Let yourself be the wonderful amazing troll that you are!
Hey, whatever happened to your knitting blog?
the knitting blog went bye-bye when josh started his teaching internship-he had no time, and I had been lagging horribly about making posts. Someday we may start another one, and in the meantime I suppose I can make posts about knitting here...
But I think that obsessing over my hair has obsessing over other issues (such as my weight, or the political climate) beat 10 ways to Sunday-when I obsess over my hair, I at least know that it is mostly really nice and pretty, but not completely perfect. So I can be frustrated and obsessive without actually impacting my ego. And unlike politics, I feel there is a potential to make a positive change about my hair, as compared to, say, foreign policy or women's rights or...you name it.
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