Posts Tagged ‘Li’

The Reason Armpit Hair Doesn’t Grow Down To Your Knees

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Li longs to learn: How does hair know when to grow? When you shave your legs, it grows back but it stops growing after a certain length. If you shave it again, it will grow back to that length. What’s up with that???

The Left Brain leads her:
Li, actually your question is easy to answer once you understand two things:

3 stages of hair growth

The first thing to know is that hair goes through 3 different stages as it grows: Anagen, Catagen and Telogen phases. The Anagen stage (that’s Anagen, not Anakin!) is the stage where the hair grows like crazy. This stage can last a up to 4 to 6 years and can produce scalp hairs that grow to be almost 3 feet in length! (that’s 100 cm for our international readers). And if you think 3 feet is impressive, you ain’t seen nothin’! Human scalp hair longer than 5 feet has been reported! Yikes! We’d hate to see the bill from her stylist!

The Catagen stage follows the Anagen stage. This is basically a transitional stage which means the follicle is slowing down production of the hair, not much happens here.

The third stage is the Telogen, or resting, stage. The hair stops growing and just sits there in the follicle. When the cycle starts all over again with Anagen phase, the old hair is pushed out by the new hair. That’s one of the reasons you normally shed about 100 or so hairs each day – the old ones are getting replaced by the new ones.

Two types of hairs

Ok, second thing to understand is that there are two different types of hairs: Terminal and Vellus. Terminal are long hairs (the 3 footers we mentioned) and are thicker and have a longer growing cycle (growing season like flowers) 6 to 8 years. Meaning most of the time they are in Anagen phase. These are found on the scalp, mostly. Terminal hairs are the kind you have to cut because they get too long.

Vellus on the other hand are short hairs (a millimeter or less) they are very fine, and they have a very short life cycle, which means they spend most of the time in the Telogen phase. That also means they’ll never grow as long as scalp hair. These very fine hairs are found on “hairless” parts of the body like arms and legs. (Ok, those areas aren’t hairless, but they kind of look hairless because the hairs are so tiny and fine.)

So, to answer your question, that’s how hair knows when to grow – it’s determined by the type of hair and the stage of growth it’s in. Which of course is determined by hormones. Isn’t everything?

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How Long Do You Have To Leave Conditioner In Your Hair?

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Li longs to learn: Does it matter how long you leave in you conditioner/hair treatment/hair mask? From what I’ve read it only coats the hair anyway so is it better if you leave it on longer?

The Right Brain respectfully obliges:
You’ve nailed one of the minor myths of hair care, Li. Conditioners DO NOT need to be left on as long as the companies tell you they do.

How conditioners work

That’s because 90% of the benefit from standard conditioners come from coating the surface of the hair. That’s not a bad thing – in fact, the best thing you can do for hair is to smooth and protect the cuticle (that shingle-like layer that covers your hair.) Yes, you have to take the time to work the product through your hair to make sure it’s evenly distributed (especially if you have a lot of hair.) But once the conditioner has had a chance to spread through your hair, leaving it on longer doesn’t make it do anything better. This part is very important – YOU HAVE TO WORK THE CONDITIONER EVENLY THROUGH YOUR HAIR! That process may take you a few minutes. But once you’ve done that part well, you can rinse.

Marketing madness

Then why do companies tell you to leave it on? In part, to make their products seem more special (and so they can sell more of them) manufacturers started making different types of conditioners that had to be left on different lengths of time. It goes something like this:

Does your hair just need “regular” conditioning? Use this product and rinse it off right away.

Does your hair need deep conditioning your hair? Use a different product and leave it on for 10 minutes.

Does your hair need a complete restructurizing makeover? Use this other product, leave it on while you shave your legs, get out of the shower, eat breakfast, walk the dog, drive to work, go on vacation… Well, you get the picture.

Telling you to leave conditioner on longer is primarily driven by marketing claims and is not based on how well the product works. One possible exception, though, are the oil-type treatments we’ve discussed before. If you’re applying a coconut oil type product to your hair you may need to give it time to penetrate. But other than that, any rinse out conditioner can be rinsed out right away.

The Beauty Brains bottom line:

In reality, once you’ve got the conditioner worked through your hair it works almost instantly. Letting it “soak in” longer doesn’t improve the way it works. There’s nothing WRONG with leaving treatments in longer, but if you’re in a hurry you can save yourself some time in the shower by not waiting that extra 10 minutes for your conditioner to kick in.

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