10 Hair myths

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1. Cutting your hair makes it stronger or grow faster.

Bull winkle. Its hair, not a lawn. Exactly where this myth started is unknown, but is probably related to the observation of men's facial hair. There are different kinds of hair on your face and head. Hair on your head and facial hair have different properties. Cutting your hair will only make it shorter and hairs grows almost exactly half an inch per month, no matter what you do or take.



2. Split ends can be repaired.

Sorry Charlie, not true. Split ends cannot be repaired and should be cut off immediately or they will split yet higher and do yet more damage.



3. Brushing your hair is good for it.

To the contrary, brushing your hair is very bad for your hair and the leading contributor to split ends and hair breakage. By all means groom your hair, but once it is in place, STOP.



4. Tight hats cause baldness.

This one probably started in the military where young men entering the service were required to wear hats and soon showed signs of going bald, or at least of hair thinning. This is due to coincidental timing. The age that young men enter the military is also the same age that male pattern hair loss begins. This is due to dihydrotestosterone, not hats. Hats do cause hair breakage and to a lessor degree to split ends.



5. Hair can turn gray or white over night.

What utter nonsense. This one was born in literature. What part of "fiction" did they not understand? Hair receives its color genetically and can only turn gray or white over very long periods of time. Actually the hair doesn't turn white in as much as the hair loses color, but not over night, or even a wild weekend.



6. Pluck one gray hair and two grow back.

Folks, if this were true I would be pulling my hair out by the fist full. I need more hair and can always color the gray hair.



7. Baldness is inherited from the mothers side of the family.

More Hair Voodoo. Male and female pattern hair loss can be inherited from either side of the family and may or may not skip many generations. Male pattern hair loss usually begins at age 18 to 20 and female patter hair loss between ages 45 and 55.



8. Dandruff is caused by dry scalp.

Dandruff and dry scalp are two entirely different things. A good shampoo and conditioner will take care of the dry scalp, which is 'flaking'. Dandruff shampoos are entirely unnecessary and inadvisable for dry scalp.

Dandruff is a serious health issue and requires medical attention and prescribed medication. The 'flakes' are actually oily, not dry. Very few people have actual dandruff and you would know it if you did.



9. Dandruff is contagious.

No. You already have the micro organism that causes dandruff, yours just aren't as active. On the other hand, there are plenty of nasty things you can get from someone else's comb or brush, so be careful.



10. Cutting your hair during a full moon makes it grow in healthier, fuller, faster or longer.

Give me a break. I am not even going to dignify this one with an explanation. Hey, if they buy into this type of earth muffin drivel, by all means, let them mark the dates on their calendar.

Top 10 Hair Myths

 
Good post. The only one i believed in before i read this was the first myth. Oh well...now I know better, Thanks Aprill for the info
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Great Info April!!

i actually thought some of these were true lol

well now i know they are just myths
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Thank you!

 
interesting! i knew brushing was bad for hair, i comb mine when i get out of the shower and that is THAT!

 
wow some of those were really interesting. I will always be scared to pull out a gray hair though. lol

 
hahahahaha!!! I love the response to pulling out gray hairs!

My mother taught me to believe about half these things and I knew she was wrong because her hair always looked so awful.

 
lmao I TRIED to explain that first one to my friend but she was like NO saying all this stuff and getting angry. I was like duh it's common sense, making it shorter with scissors wont make it grow faster

 
Thanks for sharing. I think a lot of commercial hair care/product manufacturers would like us to continue to believe in some of these myths!

 
Originally Posted by Aprill849 /img/forum/go_quote.gif 1. Cutting your hair makes it stronger or grow faster. Originally Posted by Aprill849 /img/forum/go_quote.gif Bull winkle. Its hair, not a lawn. Exactly where this myth started is unknown, but is probably related to the observation of men's facial hair. There are different kinds of hair on your face and head. Hair on your head and facial hair have different properties. Cutting your hair will only make it shorter and hairs grows almost exactly half an inch per month, no matter what you do or take. I asked my stylist about this last time I got a cut & she said it only seems like it grows faster because tons of split ends lead to breakage & a frayed look - - when you cut them all off hair grows back healthy & it seems longer. (but its really not!)
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hehehe that was kinda funny, thanx for clearing up the "cut ur hair and it will grow faster" garbage

 
Brushing your hair isn't necessarily bad for it, so long as you do it with plenty of care. Admittedly, I never brush my hair to untangle it [i comb conditioner through my hair after every wash], but brushing DOES distribute natural oils your scalp produces, which helps alleviate dryness in areas these essential oils can't reach alone: you're helping a natural moisturising process, people! Brushing helps with dry or long hair that isn't getting enough/an even distribution of moisture, and combination hair [oily scalp/dry ends]. It also gives your scalp a good massage, stimulating circulation, which is always beneficial. [Note: circulation and oil glands are different things]

Oh, and brushes are also excellent tools for styling, that don't necessarily have to rip your hair: so long as its detangled, cared for, well-moisturised and well-protected, you've got no reason to fret about excessive hair breakage and split ends. If you're gentle with the brush, its hardly any different to using your hands to style.

On the other hand, brushing to detangle big knots is, in a word, STUPID. Ripping and breaking your hair will never do any good for it. Get tangles out before you brush, when you comb your conditioner through. Tugging at your hair, pulling at it, and breaking it with forceful use of a metal instrument is a sin. Knots have to be dealt with patiently, you've got no reason to pull out perfectly good hair. Brushing your hair excessively will do absolutely nothing. Anybody this careless is signing themselves up for a whole lotta broken hair.

 

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