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View Full Version : Tangled: A Battle Between He and She Over Hair



Charlotte Sparkle
09-17-2025, 04:08 PM
Wrote this for my blog:

It's strange isn't it how something as ordinary as hair can carry the weight of identity. For most people, hair is just hair, a style, a length, a preference. But for me, it it's a battlefield.

Once again I'm growing out my hair. Not for fashion, not for vanity but for the female side of me. The woman inside who has waited patiently through decades of buzz cuts and barbershop small talk, longing to see herself in the mirror.

But that female side of me doesn't have the final say. My male side is still here too, the man I've always been to the outside world. The man that worries about looking scruffy, unkempt, too old for long hair. The man that remembers how my wife grimaced the last time I grew it out. My male side wonders if this pursuit is foolish, maybe even selfish.

And yet, every time I'm out and about, maybe in a shop, or in a crowd, I'm haunted by female hairstyles. Waves, braids, ponytails, loose curls, half up buns and long straight sheets of hair cascading over shoulders. Every style is a reminder of who I'm not, and who I could be.

Growing my hair shouldn't be this hard. But for me, it's not just growth, it's transformation and transformation always comes at a price.

I've had short hair for most of my life, since my teenage years. The kind of hair cut that blends in, that says "typical male", or more honestly, "he doesn't want questions." It was need, masculine and expected.

But a few years ago, something shifted. Maybe it was the weight of never having truly seen the female side of me, the woman inside, reflected in the mirror. She'd been there all along, waiting quietly in the shadows of the who I've been told to be. And one day, she asked for something simple: "Can we grow our hair?"

And so I did.

At first, it felt uncomfortable. Not physically, though there were plenty of awkward phases, but emotionally. Every inch of growth was a a conversation, an argument between the sides of me that have never fully agreed. The man who worries about looking unkempt, strange, or God forbid, too feminine and the woman who sees hair as a kind of freedom, a symbol of alignment, a chance to see herself... just a little more clearly.

But even that attempt was interrupted. When my father died, I cut it all off again. A sudden decision, made in the haze of grief and obligation. Somehow, short hair felt needed, a return to something solid, predictable, "proper" for a funeral. But afterwards, I felt like I had like I had said goodbye to more than just a man, I'd said goodbye to a part of me too.

Now, I’m growing it out again.

And every morning I wake up and feel the same tension, one hand on the scissors, the other on a dream.

My wife didn't like it the last time I let it grow long. She said it didn't suit me and it aged me. Part of me understood, I didn't exactly look like the man she married. But part of me wonders if she ever truly met the rest of me. The woman who's whispering beneath the surface since long before either of us said "I do."

There is another strange twist to this, a kind of visual overload going on. When I go out, to the shops, a cafe, walking through a crowd, or even at work, I find myself captivated, distracted even, by the women around me. Not in a sexual way, but in a deeply envious, yearning way. I see their hair, long, flowing, styled, unstyled, thick, fine, pinned, curled, straight, and I ache. Not because I want them.. but because I want to be them.

It’s overwhelming. I see hairstyles I love, ones I imagine myself wearing. And then I remember I?m not supposed to. That to wear hair like that as a man, even a crossdresser, invites scrutiny, stares, discomfort. And so the war continues.

Hair grows slowly. Too slowly, it seems.

What makes this journey harder is the quiet war between expectation and reality too. In my mind, I see my feminine side, long sleek hair flowing effortlessly down her back, soft and voluminous, like the the women I pass on the street. But the reality is different. Testosterone has shaped my follicles over decades, coarser strands, and uneven texture. My hair doesn't grow like theirs. It rarely falls the way I imagine it should. What I long for feels just out of reach, not because I lack patience, but because my biology seems to be holding a grudge.

Some mornings, I catch a glimpse in the mirror and feel that jolt of disconnect. The hair I'm growing doesn't always match the vision in my head, and it's painful. It's not just about hair, it's about the chasm between how I feel inside and what the world sees. Between the woman I carry in my heart and the man the mirror insists on showing me.

But I keep on going.

Because part of me believes, or at least hopes, that this time, I won't cut it. That maybe I've earned the right to see what it looks like to feel whole.

It's only hair, people say. But for me, it's not.
It's a declaration. A slow, defiant, deeply personal reclaiming of some I was told I couldn't have.
Any maybe.. a step closer to becoming who I've always been.

Some people grow hair. Others grow courage. I'm trying to grow both.

Thanks for reading

Lotte x

Jamie001
09-17-2025, 05:00 PM
Charlotte the best thing that you can do is to liberate your self like I did years ago. Get a nice feminine hair style and wear it proudly 24/7/365. You go girl!

ilisa
09-17-2025, 07:23 PM
I started growing my hair during covid, wanting to avoid the barber who I saw as a disease vector. Covid is basically over, and the hair has remained. Unfortunately androgenic alopecia has become part of my experience, but still I grow it. Its now down my back, and I too am envious of women's thick hair. Still I'm happy to have what I've got, and recently started minoxidil, lavender essential oil in my shampoo (one drop per shampoo application), and reishi mushroom tincture as a DHT blocker (careful with the reishi). Hopefully some hair will return, but I get what you're saying. On most days I've got my hair in a barette in the back to keep it out of my eyes, which is a nice touch.

I encourage you to continue growing your hair, because why not? Your wife will get used to it. Eventually. Mine has.

April Rose
09-17-2025, 07:41 PM
I have hair past my shoulders, even though I'm bald on top. I don't care if it's not fashionable. It's me.

Sandy Clifton
09-17-2025, 08:51 PM
That was so beautifully written! I've tried growing out my hair a few times in the past, but it didn't seem to want to go much past
the top of my shoulders; nowadays my nails are my growth focus.

docrobbysherry
09-17-2025, 09:17 PM
Do u realize how lucky u r to have this "problem", Char?:thumbsup:

I began losing my hair at 19! So, hearing to your dithering is like listening to someone wondering if they should buy that new mansion in Beverly Hills or the Malibu beach front house Carry Grant owned!:doh:

Gail_veiled
09-17-2025, 10:36 PM
That's a really insightful blog post Lotte. As always, it's inspiring to hear and you are very eloquent.

I grew my hair shoulder length a few yrs ago to the point where I could do short ponytail. My wife hated it so badly it was becoming a real issue and so off the hair went -- 7 yrs later I still get grief if that subject comes up :beatup:. I've found wigs are enough for me when I CD but I see the appeal of natural long hair for sure.

susan jackson
09-18-2025, 02:16 AM
Change your taste in music !

I've always had long hair. When people used to ask me about it, I would tell them it's because I liked heavy metal !!

OrdinaryAverageGuy
09-18-2025, 03:58 AM
As the Cowsills sang, "Don't never have to cut it cuz it stops by itself."

I don't think anyone has ever asked me why I have long hair. Now that there's a bunch of gray in it I look even more the aging hippy. And it looks good with a dress, too!

Good luck on keeping it this time!

chrisfp99
09-18-2025, 04:55 AM
Oh my gosh Charlotte, what an eloquent and beautifully written article. I enjoyed reading every word. I hope your hair comes out as you wish. It's interesting what you said about your wife's reaction.

I have the opposite problem. As a deeply closetted dresser I usually wear a beard. My wife hates it. But I'm lazy, and I'm told by everyone else that it looks good on me. She goes away very occasionally and of course I enthusiastically grab the opportunity for some well deserved femme time. The beard comes off a few weeks before, in case the skin needs some recovery time. I'm always wondering when the wife will notice that I always shave my beard off just before she goes away!

Chrissie xx.

Lacey New
09-18-2025, 05:28 AM
Just be glad that you don?t have male pattern baldness and that you still have hair on the top of your head.

Heather76
09-18-2025, 09:00 PM
I'd love to grow my hair out, but.......................
1.) My wife would not be a fan of hair long enough for me to actually style it like a woman (ponytail, shoulder length, etc.)
2.) My family, both brothers as well as brothers-in-law, would wonder when I lost all common sense
3.) My children and grandchildren would honestly believe I had finally lost my mind

I'm happy with a wig. As it is, I wear my hair longer than most older men and I do have a head of thick hair.

Maid_Marion
09-18-2025, 09:27 PM
Hi Lotte,

It is part of your identity. My salt and pepper hair is now longer than most women's my age!
A few years ago my friends told me that if I dyed it, I could pass for someone in my 20s [with my small petite figure.]


Marion

AshlyEmilyJane
09-18-2025, 10:49 PM
I personally love this idea.

kimdl93
09-18-2025, 11:36 PM
It is so human, or at least so first world human, to fret about one?s hair. So far as i know, your hair length, color and style are up to you.