I currently have long hair and it's beginning to drive me a bit crazy and I can only imagine it getting worse when the baby comes. I keep contemplating whether or not to chop it off and go to shoulder length, that way I will at least still be able to style it the way I like but it will be more manageable. I was thinking of getting a long bob. However, I have recently heard not to cut your hair before baby comes because you lose a lot of hair after baby is born. Any STM here experience this? And did any of you cut it then regret it after?
Re: long hair problems
After DS, I did a donation, and my hair was falling out like crazy. I'd say if you have a head full of hair, then it wouldn't matter. I thought I was going to be bald, but looking in the mirror I couldn't tell a difference.
Do what makes you comfortable. I pretty much have my hair up in a knot every day or else it gets in the way.
I didn't regret it, but then I'm used to growing it out with trims every couple months, and then chopping it off when long enough not to be too short after donating.
ETA -- right now because it's so long it takes so long to air dry/ blow dry. So I was hoping chopping some length would minimize the time. I feel like my hair sheds enough as it is so who knows if I will notice a difference after baby.
I am thinking about cutting it again this time, just to make myself feel pretty
I had it cut around the first of May when I was having such a rough time with morning sickness and taking care of a then almost 7 month old. I just needed easy. I got it cut about shoulder length and it was a little shorter than I could get it all back. Now it's an inch or so below my shoulders and goes back much easier. It's so much easier to wash and dries faster. I feel like I'm constantly pulling it back and with the shorter hair the weight isn't so much it's giving me headaches like it was before.
I have thick hair to begin with and both pregnancies it's gotten thicker. As annoying as the postpartum shedding was it was a relief when it thinned out and was more manageable and laid nicer. As long as your hair isn't already thin I doubt it'll be an issue.
Jamie
Jamie
Edited for punctuation.
You are probably going to want to be able to pull your hair back somehow after the baby is born. But even if it is a little short, you can use headbands and wraps to hold back the short pieces while you are around the house. Your newborn isn't going to care about how your hair looks and you would be able to style it if you wanted to.
Also, if your hair does thin out after birth (mine didn't, but I also never got really thick great hair during pregnancy) shorter hairstyles might give you more body. If your hair is thin and too long, it may just look limp and stringy. I suggest that you get some sort of haircut now to make yourself feel good and then save anything super drastic until after the baby comes. OR, you could talk to a hair stylist about your concerns now if it would make you feel better.
Jamie
Jamie
This! I'm from New England and people say cah instead of car, lah'yer instead of lawyer, and of course lobstah (lobster) and it drives me crazy! Just because it's "normal" to go around talking like an uneducated hick doesn't make it ok. I wouldn't be proud of it either.
Jamie
This! I'm from New England and people say cah instead of car, lah'yer instead of lawyer, and of course lobstah (lobster) and it drives me crazy! Just because it's "normal" to go around talking like an uneducated hick doesn't make it ok. I wouldn't be proud of it either.
I'm wicked pissed and all no suh at you right now! Masshole and proud!!! Bahstin accents are pissah!
No, but seriously… This is completely correct. It is truly of the utmost importance that one does not let their regional grammatical nuances influence their ability to write with proper syntax and grammar. Everybody makes mistakes and it's just an important thing to work on for the future.
Yesah bub! I seen what you're sayin'!