Just shave your head. It is so sad to watch men struggle so hard over keeping hair.
Can you ship some of those women to me somehow? Because I didn't get any compliments when I did it. Certainly not from "many women." Maybe I'm ugly as fuck, but the advice is still good. Just own it and don't try to hide behind anything. Put on some muscle and you're good to go.shave that shit off and own it. Did the same and many women/girls I worked with complimented me.
I can, if you pay postage.Can you ship some of those women to me somehow? Because I didn't get any compliments when I did it. Certainly not from "many women." Maybe I'm ugly as fuck, but the advice is still good. Just own it and don't try to hide behind anything. Put on some muscle and you're good to go.
Microneedeling. Many say it helps. I have not tried it myself. And you seem to have a dandruff problem, I would see a dermatologist first. To see if you can use it at all.
From what I understand finasteride and dutasteride are the two most common treatments with studies that back their efficacy.
I'm 31 years old. I'm using Minoxidil for frontal hair loss but is not helping. It only helps in the back, but not at front. So gaf, anyone knows another treatment for this problem? I really don't want to go bald so soon.
Taking an inevitable natural traumatic event that occurs to most men and science cannot yet combat or reverse and then feeding false hope is just fucking evily mean beyond the selfish preaching virtue signaling.I don't think the 'just shave it off/go with it!' comments are helpful, especially if you don't treat it, it's pretty much impossible to get it back.
Notably, you don't often see people say, 'you must go on these treatments to save your hair now!', outside of adverts.
It is a personal choice, and for some people (myself included), head hair is very important to us.
Now, if the treatments carried significant risk, then I'd be more open to the dismissive comments. But they don't. There is some with all of them in different ways (Minoxidol and blood pressure, Finasteride and libido/unborn child development (if conceived while on the drug), microneedling and infection, etc.) but so far nothing major that can't be avoided with minimal care.
Op has some serious elongated skull even before the receding hairline becomes an issue.
Don't fight it, buzz cut the lot and give off that "This is how I choose to look" energy. You will fool nobody with any treatments. Well, maybe just yourself....
Is levi good enough?Better genes
It's been about 10 years since I just said fuck it and shaved my head after I started to recede in my early 30s. It's very helpful advice to just say shave it off. Your self esteem will be miles better if you listen to what your body is telling you.I don't think the 'just shave it off/go with it!' comments are helpful, especially if you don't treat it, it's pretty much impossible to get it back.
Notably, you don't often see people say, 'you must go on these treatments to save your hair now!', outside of adverts.
It is a personal choice, and for some people (myself included), head hair is very important to us.
Now, if the treatments carried significant risk, then I'd be more open to the dismissive comments. But they don't. There is some with all of them in different ways (Minoxidol and blood pressure, Finasteride and libido/unborn child development (if conceived while on the drug), microneedling and infection, etc.) but so far nothing major that can't be avoided with minimal care.
I shaved my head a few years ago after I looked into the side effects that finasteride leave an unfortunate minority of users with.Now, if the treatments carried significant risk, then I'd be more open to the dismissive comments. But they don't. There is some with all of them in different ways (Minoxidol and blood pressure, Finasteride and libido/unborn child development (if conceived while on the drug), microneedling and infection, etc.) but so far nothing major that can't be avoided with minimal care.
The treatments are useful if you start early on. The problem is a lot of people wait until they're too far gone before they start looking into them, as they are often living in denial/not noticing their hair is getting worse and worse. The treatments that exist are not miracles.I don't think the 'just shave it off/go with it!' comments are helpful, especially if you don't treat it, it's pretty much impossible to get it back.
Notably, you don't often see people say, 'you must go on these treatments to save your hair now!', outside of adverts.
It is a personal choice, and for some people (myself included), head hair is very important to us.
Now, if the treatments carried significant risk, then I'd be more open to the dismissive comments. But they don't. There is some with all of them in different ways (Minoxidol and blood pressure, Finasteride and libido/unborn child development (if conceived while on the drug), microneedling and infection, etc.) but so far nothing major that can't be avoided with minimal care.
No. I think it's good advice. I struggled with hair loss since my early twenties. I had constant anxiety about my hair loss and body images issues with low self-esteem. I originally tried to go the chemical route and I slowly realized that it's just going to be a battle for the rest of my life. Spending money, time, and energy just trying to keep or maintain the hair I had. Once I finally made the decision to shave my head, it was like the most liberating feeling. I felt like a brand new person and now I can appreciate the way I look when my head is nicely shaven and smooth.I don't think the 'just shave it off/go with it!' comments are helpful, especially if you don't treat it, it's pretty much impossible to get it back.
Notably, you don't often see people say, 'you must go on these treatments to save your hair now!', outside of adverts.
It is a personal choice, and for some people (myself included), head hair is very important to us.
Now, if the treatments carried significant risk, then I'd be more open to the dismissive comments. But they don't. There is some with all of them in different ways (Minoxidol and blood pressure, Finasteride and libido/unborn child development (if conceived while on the drug), microneedling and infection, etc.) but so far nothing major that can't be avoided with minimal care.
I mean, maybe?There’s a lot of reasons for hair loss, a vitamin deficiency, and lack of protein is among them, could be worth checking with the docs on your vitamin levels.
Lack of vitamin D is quite common and can lead to hair loss.