fine hair
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Category: The HairTalk® Archives Forum Name: Hair Talk Archive Forum Description: All the old Hair Talk Messages... URL: /forum_posts.php?TID=13338
Printed Date: Jan 12, 2025 at 8:37pm
Topic: fine hair
Posted By: Nancy Subject: fine hair Date Posted: Jan 12, 2000 at 1:55am
A friend of mine recently went to a hair salon where they told her that a microorganism is responsible for causing fine hair. They said this was based on a study. They also sold her some serum to fix this problem. Is this possible. I have baby fine hair and would appreciate any comments or other suggstions with dealing with my hair.
------------- Nancy
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Replies: 10 Posted By: Nancy
Date Posted: Jan 12, 2000 at 1:55am
A friend of mine recently went to a hair salon where they told her that a microorganism is responsible for causing fine hair. They said this was based on a study. They also sold her some serum to fix this problem. Is this possible. I have baby fine hair and would appreciate any comments or other suggstions with dealing with my hair.!,!
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Posted By: Tom
Date Posted: Jan 12, 2000 at 1:56am
> There has been a considerable fuss over this organisim "Demodex" Demodex Follicurum has been around for ever. Nioxin would have you believe that this bug is a cause of hair loss because it is found on all people that have thinning hair. What is very interesting however is that the bug is found on everyone past peuberty.8!
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Posted By: Tom
Date Posted: Jan 12, 2000 at 1:56am
>> check out this site http://www.hairsite.com/late-Demodex.htm - http://www.hairsite.com/late-Demodex.htm for more info8!
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Posted By: Ally
Date Posted: Jan 12, 2000 at 1:56am
Nancy--I'm not a professional, but I spend a lot of time on my hair and do a LOT of reading on it. My hair is fine too.I think your friend got taken. Your natural hair texture/thickness is genetically determined. Nothing you ingest or apply will change the way it grows. (Unless you get sick or suffer from malnutrition, in which case you might thin it out or weaken it.)A lot of products can add bulk and dimension to fine hair--temporarily. Probably what they gave her is one of the many volumizers/thickeners that can do this. (Some contain wheat protein.)But fine hair should not be thought of as "problem hair." My mother always told me when I was little that I'd inherited her "lousy hair," and it gave me a complex. I believed it until I learned how to work with it. Fine hair has special qualities--like softness and shine--that make it stand out. And it can be beautiful.If you don't think so, look at Uma Thurman, Kate Moss, Kate Winslet, Michelle Pfieffer, and Calista Flockheart. They all have very fine hair.Ally
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Posted By: Dawn
Date Posted: Jan 12, 2000 at 1:56am
I want to heartily second the opinions expressed by Valentine and Ally here. I couldn't have a ponytail the thickness of Karens or Noreens if my very life depended on it and no topically applied hair product is going to change that, you get what God gave you, nothing more or less. However, considering the posts I've often read on this and other boards I grown into a new appreciation for my hair. It weighs nothing, floats like air, and certainly never gives me headaches when I put it up on top of my head or bothers my neck from to much strain. Yes, the hairtie at the bottom is wrapped around more times than the one at the top, but hey, that's the way it goes. I still haven't gone out in public in many many years when some complete stranger hasn't walked up to me and gushed over my hair, thin or not.So don't fight it Nancy. And I would definitely agree that longer is better with fine hair. Short it can look quite limp and lifeless and refuse to respond to even the most intensive styling, but long it takes on a new life and volume that would surprise you. Tough it out through the awkward middle stages and you'll never be sorry that you did. Its way easier to care for when its long too,just wash and go, always a good hair day!
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Posted By: Dawn
Date Posted: Jan 12, 2000 at 1:57am
Hi Cher!Isn't it funny how we sometimes don't appreciate what we've got? Curly haired women fight to straighten their hair, straight haired women perm and curl and battle to get some wave in theirs. Each has its own up and down sides and I don't know whether its old age making me more mellow or just learning to accept things for what they are but I've come to believe that its all beautiful in its own way, unique to every individual. I'd always envied women with that thick shank of hair but I've learned to accept mine now and take pride in it despite its shortcomings. Thanks for your input!Anyway, my hair story, ok, you asked for it. I was 17 going on 18 (how does one remember back that far?!!;) and I had a special event coming up so I allowed a beautician in training, a relative, who SWORE she would only trim a little bit off the ends (B**CH!)give me what was supposed to be a little touch up. Well for all my life my mother had dragged me,(and I mean that quite literally, dragged me crying and screaming 'cos she said my face was too round for long hair and I would always have to wear it short, but actually she just hated its reddish blond color because she really hated her brown color, oh NO, that's a whole other therapy session!!)anyway, dragged me to the hairdresser for those hideous and humiliating pixie cuts that look so limp and horrid with very fine hair like mine and caused me an entire childhood of self loathing, anyway, I had managed to put that behind me and by that fateful trim day so many years ago my hair had finally after much careful care, reached a bit past bra strap length and had become a central source of self esteem and personal image to me. I LOVED my hair. I considered it my best feature of my insecure teenage body. My hair was very important to me. The beautician in training KNEW this and before cutting acknowledged that she KNEW this but she still cut it nearly above my shoulders. I'll never forget the horror of looking in the mirror and seeing my hair just barely past my shoulders, not quite even able to stay pushed back behind them, running the brush through it and feeling that lack of length, feeling like I had been ROBBED, violated. I cried out loud, I cried in private. I cried for several days at the years lost to me. I know it was stupid, it was only hair everyone said, they could not understand the depth of my anger and frustration. It was a bad scene. Since then I have never allowed anyone near my hair. I don't go to salons, I don't get trims. Its not really as neurotic as is sounds, I just don't do it, don't cut it in any way. I'm not advocating such extremes for others because I know the advice is regular trims will help it grow but mine grows VERY slowly and I'm not giving up any of that hard won time to a pair of scissors again. Besides, I haven't gone out to a public place in I can't remember how many years when at least one person and usually more has walked right up and told me how lovely my hair is. Now that's not the reason I wear it so long. Its to heal and soothe my own heart, not garner attention, but I figure hey, if it ain't broke, right?!! So that's it, shoulder length to knee length in about 21 years. Not a very good growth rate, but its all the good Lord deemed my due. I'll let it grow as long as it wants, though I'm not sure what I'll do when it reaches the floor since I do like to wear it in a long loose braid and even now I have to grab that and hold it when bending over and at other times. Who knows in another 5 or 6 years I may actually HAVE to trim it! ; )End of manuscript! Cher have I ever told you how much I like you? I know we're about the same age and I've gotten to feel quite close to you on these boards over the months!That goes for all you gals out there too! I love reading about your lives, your dreams, your triumphs, et.al.!! Thank you! Enjoy what you have, long or short, full or fine, every shape, color and kind is special!Very best wishes,Dawn
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Posted By: Ally
Date Posted: Jan 12, 2000 at 1:57am
Dawn--Just wanted to tell you that reading this account was like reading my /own/ life story.My mother made me wear my hair either in a boyishly short pixie or a tightly permed bob all my life. Until I hit puberty, I was often mistaken for a boy, and it caused me no end of grief and humiliation. All I /ever/ wanted was long hair, like in the storybooks!But my mother always insisted that I didn't have "good hair," that short was the only way I could wear it, etc. If it started to get longer than my jaw, she'd drag me--sometimes crying and pleading!--to the salon to get it chopped off again. The worst part was that short hair REALLY didn't flatter me. My fine, wavy hair looked perpetually ugly and messy, and she would bring me in for perms so it would "do something." I grew up hating the way I looked. Whenever I saw a girl or woman hair past her shoulders, I'd ache with jealous longing.As farfetched as it sounds, I attribute my shaky self-esteem to this one "issue." It gave me a complex, and I think long hair will always be, to me, the height of beauty. Now I'm growing my hair out for the first time. Once it got past my shoulders, my mother stopped glowering and sighing. She has to admit it suits me a million times more.So I don't think you're being silly or vain. Women identify very strongly with their hair, and any time we get pushed into a cut we don't want, our self-image is changed against our will. We don't feel like the same person. In a way, we've been victimized.Thanks for your story.'Nuff said, Ally
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Posted By: Clare
Date Posted: Jan 12, 2000 at 1:57am
I would like to say that it feels good and is helpful to hear all of you fine ladies talk about your fine hair,and what you have gone through. I can really relate. When I was 16, my mom talked me into one those "wedge cuts", except this person did not really do a good wedge cut; it was way too short and pixieish. I proceeded that afternoon to have my junior yearbook picture taken, so I have a eternal reminder. Later on that fall I was working concessions at Texas stadium, and this guy thought I was a boy. That happened other times too. I had a sister in law who had the thick silky waist lenght hair, but she would be mean to me about mine. She would put it in hot rollers and say things like, "your hair is so thin." And its not even that thin, its just fine. I was telling my mom about that and her reply was, "When you have good hair you don't know what its like to have bad hair." Of course, my mom is in the "good hair" category. I had a mother in law who would grab my hair and pull it up to see how it would look and say, "You need to cut your hair short. Your face is too long for long hair." and other things. (My hair was barely shoulder length at the time.) Now, at 36, I don't care what anyone thinks. I am working hard to like my hair. I still find myself lusting after other kinds of hair, but not as often, and I feel more accepting of my own. I saw a questionaire in Self mag about a year ago that asked "Are you your hair?" The answer for me has been "yes." I can totally understand this one aspect of physical appearance having such an effect on a person's self esteem, either postively or negatively. For instance, there was a girl in High School voted most beautiful mainly because of the beautiful hair she had. I don't think anyone ever mistook her for a boy.Regards, Clare> I want to heartily second the opinions expressed> by Valentine and Ally here. I couldn't have a> ponytail the thickness of Karens or Noreens if> my very life depended on it and no topically applied> hair product is going to change that, you get> what God gave you, nothing more or less. However,> considering the posts I've often read on this> and other boards I grown into a new appreciation> for my hair. It weighs nothing, floats like air,> and certainly never gives me headaches when I> put it up on top of my head or bothers my neck> from to much strain. Yes, the hairtie at the bottom> is wrapped around more times than the one at the> top, but hey, that's the way it goes. I still> haven't gone out in public in many many years> when some complete stranger hasn't walked up to> me and gushed over my hair, thin or not.> So don't fight it Nancy. And I would definitely> agree that longer is better with fine hair. Short> it can look quite limp and lifeless and refuse> to respond to even the most intensive styling,> but long it takes on a new life and volume that> would surprise you. Tough it out through the awkward> middle stages and you'll never be sorry that you> did. Its way easier to care for when its long> too,just wash and go, always a good hair day!> | |