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OK, so I have a thing for blondes, I'm looking specifically for a natural lighter blonde (not dark dishwater type). I hope this isn't weird. I'm actually freaking out at the possibility of natural lighter blonde dying out, and because it's so rare in adults. I wish I could meet one again, I have met so few gorgeous-looking blonde women in my lifetime who didn't color their hair. Especially curly. Nothing quite like a gorgeous-looking natural lighter-type blonde with curls.
I have even considered the possibility that natural blondes are being deliberately extincted out.
Some natural white hair is turning naturally darker after 30 or so.. You should not base your relationship just for the hair color. I agree for saving blondes and blondes should make lot, lot of blonde babies together
OK, so I have a thing for blondes, I'm looking specifically for a natural lighter blonde (not dark dishwater type). I hope this isn't weird. I'm actually freaking out at the possibility of natural lighter blonde dying out, and because it's so rare in adults. I wish I could meet one again, I have met so few gorgeous-looking blonde women in my lifetime who didn't color their hair. Especially curly. Nothing quite like a gorgeous-looking natural lighter-type blonde with curls.
I have even considered the possibility that natural blondes are being deliberately extincted out.
Why does she need to be a natural very light blonde?
Many blondes darken up as they get older. That's the typical (though not universal) pattern.
My son is 13 and amazingly, is still very blonde indeed. I consider him rare. I don't see that many kids in his school (middle school) who are full-on blonde. Most former "very blondes" are going ashy/darker at this age. My son is half-Swedish by descent.
His brother has darkened from light blonde as a baby to very light brown. I darkened from blonde as a child to very dark blonde/very light brown (a smidge lighter than my now very light brunette son) starting in about middle school. It's very common.
But why does she HAVE to be flaxen at all, and beyond that, why does she have to be naturally so? Do you wish to produce very blonde children, or something? There are no guarantees and there wouldn't even be if you yourself were a flaxen blonde, which for some reason I'm doubting. Even with a specific ancestry it's a crapshoot. As for bagging a natural blonde, what else does she have? What if you met a brunette who was absolutely wonderful, what then...?
And finally, what good would it do for you to discover "where" except Scandinavia the natural blondes are? I'm guessing they're all outside of the U.S. (and you're in the U.S., right?) so you'd still have to go to another country, so why not Scandinavia? This whole thread is a tad odd, TBH.
BTW, OP, Sweden is full of bleached blondes. Not all of them are naturally blonde. But to answer your question: Holland has a lot of blondes. Poland and the Baltic States, too. How's your Lithuanian? You might want to brush up on that.
OK, so I have a thing for blondes, I'm looking specifically for a natural lighter blonde (not dark dishwater type). I hope this isn't weird. I'm actually freaking out at the possibility of natural lighter blonde dying out, and because it's so rare in adults. I wish I could meet one again, I have met so few gorgeous-looking blonde women in my lifetime who didn't color their hair. Especially curly. Nothing quite like a gorgeous-looking natural lighter-type blonde with curls.
I have even considered the possibility that natural blondes are being deliberately extincted out.
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