Question Posted Wednesday September 15 2010, 5:24 pm
well, this question is honestly about a friend of mine. I met him at college and hes a pretty nice dude, hes one of my many new friends.
the problem is that he's got some pretty long hair, and whenever he hangs out with me in my dorm, and his hairs fall out and i find them later in my chair, on the carpet, on my bed. etc his suite-mates also complain about his hair clogging up the shower drain. they've been able to talk him into cleaning out the shower a few times a week, but i don't think its reasonable to ask him to stay out of my room all the time, or to clean up after himself before leaving...
I'd rather see him fix his problem of hair falling out. His hair near the top of his head seems to tend to get a little greasy towards the second half of the day, and it looks a little thin and maybe damaged overall. the ends don't look terrible though.
Of course he could just get his hair cut, but he seems to be pretty adamant about keeping it, and i'd probably be a bit disappointed to see it go myself, its unique for him. The big question is simply what can he change to make his hair reasonable? i dont know any girls whose hair falls out like his does, and girl hair generally looks a lot nicer than his, too. As far as care, he's said he uses aussie shampoo and conditioner, and he dries his hair with a towel in the morning. i'm not sure about what he does for combing or brushing though.
so, is there any must-do advice for keeping long hair from falling out? or did you notice anything in his routine that could be changed to keep it from being weak or greasy? ive never had hair thats long enough to have to worry about these things, but id like to help him out. any advice would be appreciated
Attention: NOTHING on this site may be reproduced in any fashion whatsoever without explicit consent (in writing) of the owner of said material, unless otherwise stated on the page where the content originated. Search engines are free to index and cache our content. Users who post their account names or personal information in their questions have no expectation of privacy beyond that point for anything they disclose. Questions are otherwise considered anonymous to the general public.