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To: grundle

I read her comments differently. She said she had that color for three years. Maybe her natural hair color is ginger, but she has “enhanced” it to an unnatural shade.


6 posted on 05/14/2015 1:14:17 PM PDT by jacquej ("You cannot have a conservative government with a liberal culture." (Mark Steyn))
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To: jacquej

Even that statement is unclear. It could mean she had attended the school that many years while sporting that color.

I wouldn’t see a problem with a school making an exception for documented natural colors that are unusual. Like if an albino attended. This is not on the deliberate level of transwhatever.


17 posted on 05/14/2015 1:18:46 PM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (Embrace the Lion of Judah and He will roar for you and teach you to roar too. See my page.)
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To: jacquej

I had an aunt with hair of a rusty orange hue just like this girl’s hair and this was long before she ever tried to use dye. My aunt was similarly discriminated against because she also had naturally dark brown/black eyebrows and black lashes which contrasted sharply natural bright red hair. A teacher, thinking her brows were made up, forced her go scrub her eyebrows and was furious when nothing changed. So furious was the teacher that she tried scrubbing them herself, to no avail, leaving my aunt in tears. Apparently the teacher had never encountered mixed-bloods before... it was beyond her comprehension that you can have different color hair on the same person. She could have saved herself some trouble by looking at my uncle in the next class- bright flame red hair, but brown eyebrows and lashes, only he also had freckles and pale skin like most redheads whereas the aunt had olive skin.

I was born with jet black hair; by kindergarten it was just as blonde as could be with no trace of black; by fifth grade it was uniformly red-orange; by my freshman year it was darker, turned medium reddish brown with bright red streaks to the front; by graduation, it was a deep rich brown with the red turning to blonde highlights, and by thirty the blond had turned gray and the brown had lightened to a dull dishwater blonde. After that it darkened to walnut brown with no red or blonde and the gray spread to half my head; then I got sick and it turned almost all gray; after some surgery my health improved and the gray started turning bright blond while the deep walnut became near black in the back. Lately the gray has diminished in area, and the blond is getting a strawberry cast to it.

I’ve never used hair dye in my life, but have noticed that stress, health, genetics, and sun exposure can cause very dramatic color changes both seasonally and over the long term.


113 posted on 05/14/2015 2:34:42 PM PDT by piasa (Attitude adjustments offered here free of charge)
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To: jacquej

I thought the same thing, but maybe she meant she’d been at that school for three years, and had had that color the whole time, and no one had said anything until now.


123 posted on 05/14/2015 2:47:57 PM PDT by Nea Wood
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To: jacquej

I read it as she’s had it all the 3 years she’s so far been in high school...


163 posted on 05/14/2015 3:42:12 PM PDT by Axenolith (Government blows, and that which governs least, blows least...)
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To: jacquej

You can tell her natural red hair color is coming in at the roots. The eye brows look penciled in with darker color.


180 posted on 05/14/2015 6:40:16 PM PDT by Trillian
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