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So he stopped
using normal shampoos and found one without those ingredients instead. Miraculously,
within weeks, his hair stopped falling out. After a few months, it actually started
growing back.
That
conversation marked the end of SLS-containing shampoos for me too. I figured, what did
I have to lose?
I also went on
the internet to investigate and discovered quite a bit of controversy over this
theory, probably not surprisingly. I read about anecdotal evidence in favor of
avoiding SLS, but there were no scientific studies that I could find. Some of the
articles in favor of avoiding SLS also seemed traceable to vendors of non-SLS-containing
shampoos, a fact that was pointed out in several counter-articles.
So what
happened after I started using the new shampoo? My hair stopped falling out!
Seriously!
It’s been about five months now, and my hair has noticeably thickened. And while there
will always be a FEW hairs in the drain after I wash my hair – after all there’s the
natural growth cycle of hair – the amount of hair I find there has gone down so much
that it can’t possibly be just my imagination.
I used to have
to pick thick “nests” of hair from the drain both during and after each shower. Now
there is just one, and that one is pretty flimsy and sparse, nothing like the
semi-hairballs I used to find.
This raises a
question: If it should be true that SLS is behind all this, how come it doesn’t make
everybody’s hair fall out?
Here’s my
totally personal ad-hoc theory: SLS could be the metaphorical straw that broke the
camel’s back.
What this
means in plain language is this: most of us aren’t negatively affected by SLS because
healthy unstressed hair can handle it just fine.
However, if
there are enough stressors present that affect the health of someone’s hair – stress,
fatigue, aging, nutrition, health issues, and so on, then adding SLS on top of all
that may be just a little too much. And that’s when it triggers hair loss. Conversely,
taking the SLS away in a situation like that may well make hair loss stop or slow it
down. Or it may not – there may still be too many others stressors for any one
particular head of hair to stop shedding.
Who knows. I
have no idea if my theory is right, but it makes sense to me, it works for me, and so
I will be using non-SLS shampoos from here on out.
And if your
hair is thinning, you may want to consider experimenting as well. Health food store
shampoos may cost a couple of dollars more per bottle, depending on what you’re using
now, but it’s just a penny or two extra per wash at most. That’s certainly far cheaper
than any other hair loss remedy I’ve ever come across.
Which one to
get? I won’t recommend any particular brand. Just go to your trusty health food store
and read the labels. You could pick the one that smells good, or the kind that seems
right for your hair type. Or pick the volumizing shampoo – to make your hair look as
full as possible while it grows back to be thick for real.
One last
thing: Just like with Rogaine, where they warn you that you’ll have to use it for
quite a few months before you see any results, patience is of the essence here too.
While your hair loss may slow down within weeks, you may want to give it at least
several months before you judge the overall thickness of your hair. Hair grows slowly
enough even under ideal circumstances, so it may take a while until you can really see
a difference.
And now
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