Monday, November 18, 2013

I don't feel attractive, body hair?

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crackkbbyy


I'm 19 and i'm very pale, lately i've started to notice that i have a lot of body hair like on my stomach and back, i know it's natural but i feel unattractive because of it and the fact that not all of it is blonde. What can i do about it?
I also have very sensitive skin so stuff like nair gives me allergic reactions.



Answer
What Men Want: Teeth More Important Than Hair, Clothes In Match.com Survey 2-7-13
The online dating site conducted a three-year study of over 5,000 single men and women and came up with a list of the top 10 things men judge women on. The least surprising news? Over half of the list was appearance-based. It makes sense -- women have seemed to adjust their getting-ready times accordingly, devoting 136 full days of their lives primping and preening for a night out, according to another 2008 survey.

EXAMPLE OF ONE FROM YA Poster, who've tried everything. . .
-WAXING: the wax usually irritates my sensitive skin. I used an organic wax once and it worked out much better than the regular one I used but it still didn't stop my skin from getting red & irritated.
-THREADING: this is an option that isn't as bad as the other things I have used. But I prefer not to do it unless it really is the only other option I have.
-SMOOTHAWAY: this is the little pink hair removing applicator. If you're not familiar with it, look it up on Google and you might get an idea as to what it is. I use Smoothaway when I don't have another option. But more often than not it irritates my skin and my skin turns red on the sides of my upper lip. And it makes it worse when I try to put my face lotion on.
-HAIR REMOVING CREAM: I used this a few times but this irritates my skin more than anything else I have ever used. My skin turns red and all that....

GLAMOUR magazine's monthly man survey March 2013:
1. You hook up with a woman you like a lot, but she has a few days' worth of stubble on her legs. Is there a future here?
Sure. 61% of guys do't care about leg stubble.
Nope. 15%
24% only if there's an explanation, like a citywide razor shortage.

Watch Mirror, Mirror when the evil queen played by Julia Roberts wanted to look as fair as the princess played by Lily Collins. I came from a vacay in Ireland, and many of the people there working in the profession (luxury hotels and banks, etc.) have beautiful white complexion!
This is what beautiful flawless skin looks like:
http://www.glamourmagazine.co.uk/dos-and-donts/hairstyle-pictures-today/2012/05/15/zooey-deschanel-side-swept-chocolate-curls
Google Liv Tyler. http://www.google.com/search?client=safari&rls=en&q=liv+tyler&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8
Or Google Catherine Zeta Jones - she's 42 with beautiful skin.
Watch The Duchess - Keira Knightly has flawless complexion - a natural beauty.
Taylor Swift is another starlet with beautiful skin, in her 20's.
Nicole Kidman has flawless skin or Julianne Moore, who is 7 yrs. younger than me!

Google: Pale Complexion celebrities.About 513,000 results

No one looks forward to their hair removal routine, regardless of what it is. Each option comes attached to its unique drawbacks. Shaving is terribly time-consuming and has to be repeated daily in order to achieve best results. Waxing is painful while hair removal creams can be smelly and irritating to the skin. Electrolysis is effective and near-permanent⦠but it's also expensive to the point of being outside of the average person's budget.There is NOTHING PERMANENT, not even laser. Once you stopped? They will grow back like before, it's permanent FOR YOU, because you have to keep at it. . . . for EVER & EVER.
People Magazine Red Carpet Style issue, page 75, Sienna Miller, showing 'beard' blonde hair, even with makeup.

THREE MOST COMMON MYTHSl:
1.The rate of hair regrowth will not change because of hair removal.
2.Hair coverage will not change in density; your body has a set number of hair follicles.
3.Ingrown hairs are common but not impossible to avoid; everyone has different susceptibility to ingrown hairs.

Babylonian Lifestyle? (10 points easy!!!)?




Elaine


I need a medium sized paragraph on the lifestyle of Babylonia, around the time when their Babylonian numerals were invented.
Please include what the men and woman did during the day, food, clothing, and culture.
THANKS!!!
What the heck Norman? Did I even mention it was homework? NO! And you know what? It isn't! I'm doing a book about the history of countries that are around my parent's countries! Next time, don't assume please. And if you want to be that rude then next time do not answer my questions.



Answer
A tall order, but here's some ideas...
Babylon was great starting c.1700BC and after ups and downs peaked in the 500's BC. They were part of (and sometimes an empire controlling) all 'Mesopotamian culture' which covered the whole area from the Persian Gulf up around to Syria. Babylon sat in about the middle of this arc. The whole culture was based on the 2 great parallel rivers (Tigris, Euphrates), and the land between. The land between over 100's of years had been laced with 1000's of canals for the 1000's of farm plots, and was green, wet and impossibly flat (like all the surrounding area). The population was large, agriculture based, highly organized and concentrated in dozens of great cities, formed into city states often all part of an empire of one of them like Babylon.
These cities were extensive with walls 100' tall/ 100' wide with battlements on top and grand gates circling the whole thing. Dominating the cities were the step pyramids (ziggaruts) 100's of ft. high that in the flat landscape could be seen for 50 miles.
Food...the staple was bread (usually barley, sometimes wheat) and beer (bread fermented to alcohol and flavored). The rivers provided fish, water creatures and birds. Meat (goats, sheep, cattle) were saved for special occasions or only the upper class. The upper class too had most of the access to luxuries like honey, fruits etc.
Clothes...unlike modern movies people did not wear grey/ brown rags and carry crooked sticks. A needle and thread and weaving worked as good then as now and Babylon was known for it's seamstresses/ sewers/ cloth makers and dyers. Clothes in the city were colorful/ expertly made, the nobles luxurious, only peasants in the fields, workmen, and slaves went about in towel like garments.
Trousers of course had not been invented. Male peasants, workmen, slaves, wore a kilt around their middle, were bare chested or a longer 'kilt' between knees and shoulders or up over one sholder. Poor class women/ farmer workers, one piece linen type dress neck to ankles. Others, middle class traders/ merchants, crafts people, scholars/ teachers, rich, nobles all worse much nicer tunics/ robes etc. often in bright colors/ embroidered with designs, for the rich in thread of real gold.
Jewelry...was highly developed and worn by both genders. For those who could afford it as good as any made today in gold, lapis, gems, precious stones.
What they did....All depends on what class they were in...Peasants in the farm/ canal land around the cities, did the timeless toil of the farm, planting, weeding, harvest, keeping canals open. The women stayed at the village/ farm house kneading and backing the bread, smoking fish, drawing water with other women at the well, making pottery, watching children, helping in the field at harvest. the only days these people had off were the many religious festivals when free grain/ beer might be passed out and the village would share a roast goat, play music, get drunk on barley beer.
Middle class....Merchants, traders, professionals (scribes, scholars, teachers, doctors), better off builders/ craftsmen...would do as you'd think. Shops to tend to, tending their table in the market, selling goods through the city,working at their craft morning till evening (no good light to work nights). Buying in the market, stopping at tavern, visiting a temple prostitute. Women would be in the city house often with maid or lower class younger girl to help out. They might go to the market, or visit one of 100 temples.
Upper class and nobles/ soldiers...Drill/ military stuff for the soldiers, tending weapons, horses, chariots, then tavern for gambling/ drinking, and brothel. Nobles/ royals/ upper class...total luxury, pools, gardens, baths, lots of servants/ slaves to wait on them, musicians, acrobats, fine foods, wine, spices etc.
Music was highly prized throughout society judging by the large number of musical instruments found (flutes, harps, cymbals) but I don't much about who played/ who listened. As far as I know they did not have theaters like the ancient Greeks/ Romans.
At it's height in the 500'sBC Babylon is believed to have had a population of 200,000.




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