I find it very difficult to accept that eating patterns can make such a difference in the time span of a human's life. What we are today is very closely related to the eating habits of our ancestors for thousands of years, and at such time scales it is quite possible that diet plays an important role in the development of certain genetic traits. But over some years only? I don't think so.
In fact, I am the living counter-example of your theory. As a rule I eat less than a man of my age (46+). I remember being like that since the time of my puberty, 30 years ago more or less. I don't know why, I guess I am built like that. The consequence (I suppose of this diet pattern?) is to keep even at this age the body form and structure that I had as a young adult, around 18-20. Nothing changed since that time, shirts and trousers still fit me (I found some, forgotten in my parents' house, and I tried them). Nothing, but one: I went bald early in my life
; hair loss starting at teen age and NW7 pattern around or before 30. Still, when I wear today a hat, many people are confused and think that I am a young man around 25 because of my slender physique (also no wrinkles or saggy face either). This is what I was told at least. I wish I could keep my hair but the diet did not help to the least. Of course it did other good which I cannot ignore.
On the other hand, many overweight, even obese, people that I know around my age or older, have most of their hair. So, according to my personal anecdotal observation, it goes the other way around: fat seems to help keeping healthy hair. Of course I do not support this position, it is simply the feeling from what I see around me without keeping any precise statistics. I believe that AGA is mostly a genetic trait, perhaps related to diet but through an obscure chain of ancestors over many generations.
In fact, I am the living counter-example of your theory. As a rule I eat less than a man of my age (46+). I remember being like that since the time of my puberty, 30 years ago more or less. I don't know why, I guess I am built like that. The consequence (I suppose of this diet pattern?) is to keep even at this age the body form and structure that I had as a young adult, around 18-20. Nothing changed since that time, shirts and trousers still fit me (I found some, forgotten in my parents' house, and I tried them). Nothing, but one: I went bald early in my life

On the other hand, many overweight, even obese, people that I know around my age or older, have most of their hair. So, according to my personal anecdotal observation, it goes the other way around: fat seems to help keeping healthy hair. Of course I do not support this position, it is simply the feeling from what I see around me without keeping any precise statistics. I believe that AGA is mostly a genetic trait, perhaps related to diet but through an obscure chain of ancestors over many generations.
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