Posts Tagged ‘conditioner’

Kinder, Gentler Hair Care Without Toxic Chemicals

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

If you’re pregnant, you can expect to lose some of your hair during and after pregnancy. Search your family tree. If either of your parents or your grandparents had significant hair loss by middle age, keep your fingers crossed. You may have inherited the baldness gene. Are you a female Baby Boomer? Congratulations – you’re menopausal or perimenopausal and so is your hair. If you work in certain occupations, engage in water sports that involve swimming pools and seawater, or live with certain diseases like lupus and diabetes, expect hair issues. The brutal facts are that heredity, lifestyle and life’s events can cause thinning hair, excessive hair loss or baldness.

It’s hard to escape all of the potential factors that could contribute to your hair loss. Meanwhile, back at the fort. The best defense is a good offense. You can help your hair stay healthy longer by adopting a kinder, gentler approach to hair grooming. At least you won’t unwittingly contribute to the factors that could rob your of your hair.

Your hair does NOT need many of the ingredients that you find on the label of your shampoo and conditioner. Many of the indecipherable ingredients have no real purpose in hair care; most are preservatives, binders, waxes or coloring agents. They give you a temporary hair fix. Unfortunately, you will soon find that you need another fix soon after, if you are to keep your bad hair days to a minimum. Even a few organic and natural shampoos use some suspect ingredients.

Grab a shampoo bottle; any bottle from a major cosmetics manufacturer will do. Take out your reading glasses and fire up your browser. Get ready for some interesting reading. In addition to the usual suspects mentioned here previously (DEA, Phalates, Parabens, Propylene and Polyethylene Glycol, Sodium Lauryl and Sodium Laureth Sulfate), some other common ingredients that you DON’T need for healthy hair are:

1.    Fragrance
2.    Imidazolidinyl Urea
3.    DMDM Hydantoin
4.    Isopropyl Alcohol
5.    Mineral Oil and Petrolatum

These ingredients can lead to skin irritation and dryness, hormone disruptions, cancer and worse. A good rule of thumb for hair care ingredients is if you can’t eat it, you shouldn’t be putting it on your skin and hair!

Visit the Skin Deep website to find shampoos and conditioners with the fewest unnecessary chemicals. Give the hair you’ve got a better chance of staying on your head.

Recession Busting Hair Care Alternatives

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

Perhaps, you have been under a rock and you don’t know about the recession. While history shows that the economy usually recovers, most people will need to tighten their belts for a while to get through the bad times. Some people take the bus to work; others have given up cable TV. Many people looking for ways to balance their personal budgets have started looking at how to cut the cost of hair upkeep.

Maybe you won’t get your hair cut as often. Perhaps, you need to reconsider coloring your hair and renewing your perm every month. Maybe you are even considering taking the plunge and doing your hair at home! Don’t worry. You do not have to suffer from bad hair days just to keep gas in your car. You do not even have to start buying shampoo at the dollar store or collecting hotel and cruise line shampoo samples.

Recession or not, taking care of your hair at home, is not as hard as you think. The great part is that you will find that most of the items you will need are right in your kitchen or your pantry! Along the way, these minor changes in your normal hair care routine might help you save a few hairs too.

Apple Cider vinegar is one of the oldest home fixes for your hair. Dilute a cup of vinegar with seven cups of water. Rinse your hair with the vinegar solution after shampooing. It will make you hair shinier and liven up fading hair coloring. The vinegar smell will evaporate after just a few minutes.

Mayonnaise is a great conditioner for dry hair. You don’t have to spring for the most expensive brand. Slather it on before shampooing. Leave it for five minutes. Remove all the mayonnaise from your hair by washing it with warm water and a mild shampoo. Style your hair as usual. It will shinier, fuller and easier to manage.

Olive oil and avocados will also help you accomplish similar results. Some people alternate pantry ingredients (depending on what’s on sale in the grocery). Others even combine them to make a conditioner that suits their hair’s unique needs.

There is no rule that you can’t eat the leftovers if you decide to experiment by combining some of these recession busting kitchen pantry hair care ingredients!