ᎣᏏᏲ! Greetings! I am back at the 3 year mark of regrowing my hair out (again). I cut my hair because I was around modern Native Americans and they were thrown off a bit by the hair. Apparently missionaries divided tribes and told the converts to the white man's religion not to associate with traditional people. Traditional people have long full hair in some tribes. I am planning on growing it to terminal length. It is long enough that it is again past my chest. I am not sure what length it will end up being. In my culture men can have long hair. It is not considered effeminate. So, on-wards and downwards. Hope all are well. Let me know how y'all are doing and ask any questions you might have. I am fairly open about my culture.
Good luck with your decision. I would decide what makes you feel at ease with yourself and go from there.
Darrin
Good luck with your decision. I would decide what makes you feel at ease with yourself and go from there.
Darrin

I think its so important for Native men and women to keep their hair long. My grandfather(Ute) was forcibly removed from his home, and forced to live with another family who was of course white. He never really talked much about that time in his life, but he did tell us about how he didnt cooperate with his long hair being chopped off, he was literally held down as they cut his hair. That experience was so traumatic for him, he said it was if his soul had been taken. So, after hearing this as a child I decided that I would always keep my hair long, as a way to honor my grandfather. I know its different for a woman, but it hasnt always been fashionable to have waist length hair, and even now as a 40 year old woman I still have beautiful long hair down to my waist. I think its awesome that youve decided to keep your hair long. I find long hair on men to be very sexy- not at all effeminate.
Greetings may it be well with you.
Thank you for the post and thank you for being willing to share your grandfather's story. He was a strong boy and I am sure a strong man. To me, whether one is woman or man with long hair, it still honors the struggle of the ancestors for what they did to help their people. I am Conestoga, we still are here speaking our Conestoga Language and carrying forward our Conestoga Culture ways. We have been called "Susquehannock" by English speakers, but we call ourselves Conestoga. Our name has a lengthy translation, so I am not going to translate. Our men have always had hair length in survival length after the Conestoga Massacre of 1763. We are re-emerging publicly after hiding in plain sight since 1763. We are still in our original traditional homeland. Last year it became safe to be public about ourselves with the passage of the non-discrimination amendment to the constitution of the state that occupies most of our unceded homeland. Now I can keep my hair at the length I want it because I am protected by the new amendment. This is the first time since 1763 that we Conestoga have equal treatment under the law since 1763. It is such a relief. Some battles are emotional and spiritual rather than physical, and our Conestoga have made it to equal treatment and are beginning to win that war.
May it be well with you.
Wow! Hot mane! And I say this as a gay man...
See you in Khyberspace!
Yadgar