Though the final decades of her life saw a quieting of her more exuberant hair looks, Turner will forever remain something of a phoenix, a woman who rose from the turmoil with the kind of fire born of faith and offered embodiment through beauty. “If you are unhappy with anything your mother, your father, your husband, your wife, your job, your boss, your car whatever is bringing you down, get rid of it,” wrote Turner. “Because you’ll find when you’re free, your true creativity, your true self comes out.”
Turner’s blonde and barbed wigs were an exaggeration of a decade already defined by over-the-top hair, the better to pair with the era’s heavy, sculpted makeup and oversized suiting. “Tina’s hair took the idea and turned it up to 11,” says Gibson. “The fact it’s so removed from traditional ideas of femininity gave it edge and marked Tina out as a true individual who isn’t afraid to challenge stereotypes.” Gibson and Turner also note the movement that the wigs brought to the stage, an amplification of Turner’s own energy and kineticism.
“I was kind of floored that I didn’t immediately connect my perimenopausal symptoms to perimenopause and I write about health for a living!” says Jancee Dunn, the bestselling novelist, journalist, and former MTV VJ, who just released her latest book Hot and Bothered: What No One Tells You About Menopause and How to Feel Like Yourself Again. After covering health and science for 20 years, Dunn was stunned by the lack of information available when she started going through perimenopause, a term that many women still aren’t familiar with (although around six thousand women will enter it today). Considering doctors in most medical schools receive only one hour of instruction on menopause on average, this information gap, unfortunately, adds up.Vist our store at: AaronShirt LLCThis product belong to nang
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