I think that hair grows at the rate predetermined by genetics.. however.. I also think that massage, as you do when you wash and brush your hair, stimulate blood flow to the scalp and possibly has an effect on health of the hair.
/guess mode
- JnA - 5th Mar 08
If you clean cut the hair should grow faster and the rate of growth will slow down as it grows. For example seikhs of india dont cut their hair but the growth slows down and eventually it stops growing. As otherwise their lock of hair will be bigger than their head.
- eroshik - 6th Mar 08
The limit of hair growth is not because the hair stops growing, but because the hair falls out when it gets too long (I guess that is one way it stops growing). OK, strictly speaking, I believe it is not the length of the hair that matter so much as how long it has been growing, but if it is not cut, then the length of time it is growing should have a constant relationship to its ultimate length.
- another_someone - 6th Mar 08
Not sure about if uncut hair grows slower than short hair but thinking about it as the human body is a marvel of natural engineering with the ability to sense and react naturally to changes in our enviroment and lifestyles in ways that we are still discovering I could see the hair follicle being naturally designed to notice the extra pull due to the weight of the long hair and therefore changing the output from normal growth length wise to growth thickness or density wise strengthening the hair so it becomes less prone to breakage due too weight effectivly slowing down its growth.
That could be a load of bull, but sounds feasible
As far as why hair will not keep getting longer for ever is because hair follicles turn on and off.
I Believe while some are growing others are laying dormant producing no growth for a few months or so and during this time the hair in the dormant follicle will break off. when that follicle then turns on others will have turned off preventing hair from gaining in length for ever.
And is also probably why i look a bit greyer in the winter as the majority of my grey hairs seem to be in full growth during this time whilst during mid summer many of my grey hairs seem to lay dormant.
- ukmicky - 7th Mar 08
Doesn't seem to work like that for me and it's from whether or not, I am well or poorly. That might be genetic thing as my Mother's hair was thin,
but mine is thick and heavy. A complete difference in our DNA makeup.
- rosalind dna - 8th Mar 08
I love that woman's dreads!
- Em - 22nd Nov 09
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