I could, except I'd have to insist that the Ghost of X-mas Future would be a penguin. An electric penguin, twenty feet high, with long green tentacles that sting people, and you can stab it in the wings and the blood can go spurting ...
YOU ARE HIRED!
(shit, I don't have that power)
When you say Penguin, do you mean a nun, cuz it makes it funnier if it's a nun. the image reminds me a lot of catholic school days.
If I directed Christmas Carol, there would be camels.
If it's not hard to take care of, Aimee, I'd keep it. I suspect it's an old wives' tale that is still in circulation.
If I directed Christmas Carol, there would be camels.
sorry dear, we are in California. No smoking inside. Plus there are lots of kiddies in the show. It would stunt their growth. Then we'd have to cut them so they could grow better and faster and fuller.
If Em's hair looks funny and uneven, a cut might make it look better, less patchy. Otherwise, as long as it isn't getting over tanglely or too much to care for, I'd let it grow.
good thing the cat doesn't have a job.
A couple of co-workers have told me that hispanic women will shave their newborn's head around 3 months to make the hair grown evenly
DH's Chinese co-worker did the exact same thing.
Common with Filipinos too.
As Robin notes, it's a myth.
However, with young children the baby fine hair grows out and is at the ends, and the stronger, thicker hair is closer to the scalp. So cutting off the fine ends, or even shaving it, means the new growth is often thicker hair than they had originally. It doesn't
make
it thicker. You're just getting rid of the earlier, fine hair. The thicker hair comes in naturally behind.
I have never cut the back of her hair. She has bangs now, but the length of her hair is still the first growth.