I am Bald.
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Giving up is not my thing. I fight everything and argue against everything I think is wrong for as long as i'm alive. Quitting is not my thing but if it really makes your life better to just quit on hair loss then good for you. I just don't have the quitter mentality, and that's no offense to any one who does actually give in. I've been going through MPB for a decade, and AA since 22 years old, basically my body is just forcing me to give up on it and shave it all off but I won't do that.Comment
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Giving up is not my thing. I fight everything and argue against everything I think is wrong for as long as i'm alive. Quitting is not my thing but if it really makes your life better to just quit on hair loss then good for you. I just don't have the quitter mentality, and that's no offense to any one who does actually give in. I've been going through MPB for a decade, and AA since 22 years old, basically my body is just forcing me to give up on it and shave it all off but I won't do that.
What is your regimine?Comment
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Giving up is not my thing. I fight everything and argue against everything I think is wrong for as long as i'm alive. Quitting is not my thing but if it really makes your life better to just quit on hair loss then good for you. I just don't have the quitter mentality, and that's no offense to any one who does actually give in. I've been going through MPB for a decade, and AA since 22 years old, basically my body is just forcing me to give up on it and shave it all off but I won't do that.Comment
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The question is WHEN. I am 23 now, I would like to have a head full of hair when I can still be flirting with 20 year old chicks and it be deemed socially acceptable.
If something comes in 10 years, I will be 33 and it would be late as hell. If my baldness isn't a deal breaker, my wrinkles and overall un-youthfulness would be by then. I am sure I will still be happy to get my hair then, but it would have already robbed me of my youth.Comment
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Giving up is not my thing. I fight everything and argue against everything I think is wrong for as long as i'm alive. Quitting is not my thing but if it really makes your life better to just quit on hair loss then good for you. I just don't have the quitter mentality, and that's no offense to any one who does actually give in. I've been going through MPB for a decade, and AA since 22 years old, basically my body is just forcing me to give up on it and shave it all off but I won't do that.
That being said, I do respect Exodus's attitude and it's a path that I may eventually have to take. And if I do take this path, it will not be because I have accepted hair loss or because I no longer care about whether I have hair or not. It will be because I would rather shave my head than opt for today's limited and relatively ineffective treatment options. Finasteride is giving me side effects, minoxidil didn't do a damn thing for me, and like the vast majority of hair loss sufferers, I am not about to get a hair transplant or a wig.Comment
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I like this post. I cannot stand people who say things like "accept it", "adapt to it" (like I'm some f****n animal or something), or "you need to learn to cope with it". I've always lived by the motto "refuse to accept" because some things in life are unacceptable, make a person miserable, and should not be accepted. I used to know this female bartender who had a tattoo of that asinine Serenity Prayer. Ya know, the one that says "accept the things I cannot change". What a crock of s**t! I highly doubt that she would simply accept it if she was losing her hair.
That being said, I do respect Exodus's attitude and it's a path that I may eventually have to take. And if I do take this path, it will not be because I have accepted hair loss or because I no longer care about whether I have hair or not. It will be because I would rather shave my head than opt for today's limited and relatively ineffective treatment options. Finasteride is giving me side effects, minoxidil didn't do a damn thing for me, and like the vast majority of hair loss sufferers, I am not about to get a hair transplant or a wig.Comment
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The switch seems to flip at 25 though, that's when I started noticing about a third of the people my age in real life and on social media in all different stages of hair loss. I didn't notice my crown thinning until around 23/24 and soon after hopped on finasteride. People love to hate on it but it saved my ****ing hair. That's why it kind of pisses me off when there a people who have never taken it scaring others from ever giving it a shot. Thus losing hair they could have saved until better treatments come out.Comment
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35YrsAfter also posts as CITNews and works at Dr. Cole's office
forhair.com
Cole Hair Transplant
1045 Powers Place
Alpharetta, Georgia 30009
Phone 678-566-1011
email 35YrsAfter at chuck@forhair.com
Please feel free to call or email me with any questions. Ask for ChuckComment
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you dont go completely bald it means youll have to shave your head yourself which is even harder than going to a hairstylist.Comment
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More than a year ago I posted on here in fear and in desperation over losing my hair. It ruined my life and sapped all confidence I had. I checked this site over and over again, in some vain hope that Finasteride or Minoxidil would cure me.
One year on I am happy to say I never took that route. I will be bald and I can't change that. So far I rarely visit here and I can safely say I have led a hair worry free life!
My love life or sex life has not even been affected, if anything I've had more success now than I did with hair. I now buzz my head Grade 0 and I work out, all the motivation I need.Comment
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So when people say - 'just shave it', they arn't really thinking about what is involved.
It might save some money in the long term, but I don't think it saves time - it may even take up more time.
So let's say you choose to buzz your hair, it would make sense to buy some decent hair clippers, cos you're going to be buzzing it a lot. You don't want cheap clippers that will break. Some hair salon grade professional clippers will cost you more than you would spend in a year going to a hairdresser/barber.
I know a few people who buzz or shave their head. I'm told if your buzzing it down with clippers, you need to do it once a week to stay on top of it. So there is some commitment needed there to do this every week for the rest of your life. Otherwise the random bits will grow back of course. Actual shaving probably needs to be done more often, say every few days.
Then you'll need to learn how to view you head from all angles while cutting, so you don't miss any bits. After several goes at doing it, at a guess maybe with some experience it will take about 10 mins to buzz it with clippers?
Whereas going to the hairdresser only takes about 1 hour, say every 2 months. Or less if you felt like growing it a bit.
10 mins x 8 (8 weeks) = 80 mins. 80 mins > 1 hour. More time spent buzzing vs hairdresser. Possibly takes longer if actually shaving.Comment
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Head shaving is certainly not as easy as non-balding people like to think it is.
So when people say - 'just shave it', they arn't really thinking about what is involved.
It might save some money in the long term, but I don't think it saves time - it may even take up more time.
So let's say you choose to buzz your hair, it would make sense to buy some decent hair clippers, cos you're going to be buzzing it a lot. You don't want cheap clippers that will break. Some hair salon grade professional clippers will cost you more than you would spend in a year going to a hairdresser/barber.
I know a few people who buzz or shave their head. I'm told if your buzzing it down with clippers, you need to do it once a week to stay on top of it. So there is some commitment needed there to do this every week for the rest of your life. Otherwise the random bits will grow back of course. Actual shaving probably needs to be done more often, say every few days.
Then you'll need to learn how to view you head from all angles while cutting, so you don't miss any bits. After several goes at doing it, at a guess maybe with some experience it will take about 10 mins to buzz it with clippers?
Whereas going to the hairdresser only takes about 1 hour, say every 2 months. Or less if you felt like growing it a bit.
10 mins x 8 (8 weeks) = 80 mins. 80 mins > 1 hour. More time spent buzzing vs hairdresser. Possibly takes longer if actually shaving.Comment
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When I used to have a good amount of hair, I used to just use my hands to just pat it down and go outside, no time wasted at all, barber once a month. I had very soft hair, there was no need for a comb. Now things changed, I have to shave EOD in the week. Definitely more time spent on my follicly challenged head now than when I had a full head of hair, both hands-on and my mind is always on it. There's no denying that for me. I can't wait for that day to come to an end. I know some of you guys have to buzz less frequently, but you see my problem is, I have alopecia areata too, so once my hair grows for 2 days, you see all the ugly patches over my head. A zero guard minimizes the appearance of the AA a little bit. So this is why I shave every other day. Hopefully by this time next year, this will be a thing of the past.Comment
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