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Chit Chat >> The LongLocks Lounge >> Terminal Length: How Does Hair Know http://www.longlocks.com/salon/?num=1123824959 Message started by Christiana on Aug 12th, 2005 at 4:35am |
Title: Terminal Length: How Does Hair Know Post by Christiana on Aug 12th, 2005 at 4:35am
Hi Ladies,
My sister's high school biology textbook claims that everyone's hair is genetically programmed to grow to a certain length. (Could that explain why I can't get past tailbone???) Anyway, if you CUT it, from the ends, how do the roots know to grow back to its terminal length? I am soooo very clueless here! Any long-haired scientists or biologists out there? |
Title: Re: Terminal Length: How Does Hair Know Post by gabi on Aug 12th, 2005 at 7:18am
Oh that's a hard one and opinions vary.
I'm thinking that unless a hair makes it all the way from out of the scalp to natural shed time without ever being cut or broken off - that would be the true terminal length; and that would vary depending on how your health was during all this time and other factors. So while I do believe that there is a genetic terminal length I think people most frequently don't find it. All we can do is try to control our general health and treatment of the hair while cutting as little as possible... Tailbone is pretty darn nice though ;D...g |
Title: Re: Terminal Length: How Does Hair Know Post by Galadriel on Aug 12th, 2005 at 8:16am
As far as I know, terminal length depends on 1)the growth rate of hair 2)how long individual hairs live and 3) shedding rate. Of course, a lot depends also on how one cares for her hair, how much she cuts etc. I've heard people often claim, that in most people this results roughly to classic length hair. However, many people can grow much longer than that, and only very rarely the hair remains shorter. Many more people claim though, that their hair "just doesn't grow". Usually when one takes a closer look it's evident that the problem isn't with terminal length but with treatment of hair- to reach very long lengths hair requires good, gentle care. It is normal that when hair grows very long, it has resting phases that can last very long -over a year- and during which the hair doesn't grow. After that, it can resume growth. Your hair has probably (not certainly!) reached terminal length when you have recorded no growth for at least one year and half AND your ends have a thinning, tapered look "fairytale ends". Note, that observing just one of these signs isn't a sign of terminal length: many people have tapered ends, but their hair still grows and likewise there are people whose hair is in resting phase: doesn't grow, but ends look still thick.
To your question...not all of your hairs are the same length, ever. You have at all times hairs in all stages of growth. When you cut, you can reach only so many of them, the longest hairs. Though you may shed those hairs sooner than the hairs that you didn't get at when you cut, there are always enough "intact" hairs that can grow to their maximum length if you don't keep cutting. Which you see as hair growth. This is just how I reason it, not scientific fact. |
Title: Re: Terminal Length: How Does Hair Know Post by styg on Aug 14th, 2005 at 10:16pm
LOL
hair is just programmed to fall out at some point, after 6 to 10 years if i am not mistaken. terminal length is just a hypothetic length someone's hair could grow to in ideal circumstances (no cutting, no damage, no stress, great diet). if hair would "know" it's terminal length and only fall out at that length, then most of us shouldn't be losing any hair, so obviously, it doesn't care it gets cut. (not trying to promote cutting here ;D ) everything in our silly little bodies is planned unfortunately. cells die at their specific rate, well except for cancer cells then >:( (<- @ cancer cells). |
Title: Re: Terminal Length: How Does Hair Know Post by MillieBelle on Aug 14th, 2005 at 10:25pm
I had always wanted to know this, but always forgot to ask, so a big thank you to Christiana!! ;D
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