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‎07-13-2015 05:59 PM
I've been using WEN regularly since Chaz introduced the seasonals with FGP, and have never noticed significant hair loss until this spring. That's when my fur-kid's nine month battle against cancer was finally lost. Stress started it, and right now we are having record temperatures and drought, so I think stress has transitioned into summer seasonal shedding. All other mammals lose a lot of hair in the spring and summer, why not humans, too? Unless it continues and I can see myself going bald, I'm not going to let it stress me out. Since the seasonals are soy-based, just like the POM you were having success with, I doubt it's the WEN, but if you are really worried, take a WEN sabbatical and see if the shedding stops. Or talk to your doctor again, you might need a more thorough endocrinology consult. Thyroid disease is not uncommonly associated with Addison's Disease, and hair loss is typical of Addison's. The first thing our mind jumps to when we notice changes in our bodies is our topical treatments, but what's inside our skins has far more effect than what we put on from the outside (barring really toxic, caustic stuff, of course!) so it's always better to investigate our innards if something is wonky with the outside.
‎07-13-2015 06:38 PM
‎07-13-2015 06:54 PM - edited ‎07-13-2015 07:01 PM
@ChynnaBlue wrote:
@butterflygirl69 wrote:
@ChynnaBlue wrote:
Everyone has different symptoms and hair loss is one for many women. For a while, I thought my hair loss was my welcome sign to menopause, but it wasn't. (At least not this time. I haven't started menopause yet, so who knows what I'll get in my eventual menopause gift basket.)
The bolded part made me laugh
My menopause gift basket was definitely given to me by someone who doesn't like me very much! It's like a cruel joke!
Right? I'm terrified. I'm already always too hot and if I get hot flashes on top of that, I'm pretty sure I'll go mad. I'll have to get a job where I can work from the middle of a pool or a walk-in freezer.
ChynnaBlue, I'm post-menopausal but my menopause time was a roller coaster.
--
I had hot flashes galore until I switched over to an organic diet and cut out a lot of meat/chicken in favor of organic dairy products from grass fed cows. I wasn't trying to stop my menopausal symptoms, I was just listening to PBS specials and trying to eat a healthier diet. I was so surprised when my hot flashes completely disappeared in a few weeks (and never came back).
In retrospect, I'm guessing that I probably could have eaten some meat/chicken as long as it was organic (no growth hormones) and the animals were grass fed (good Omega-3 profile versus bad Omega-6 profile).
--
While I haven't tried it, Andrew Lessman has a product called Positive Passage which has gotten some great reviews. HSN sells his Ultimate Women's Wellness and Evening Primrose products which gets great reviews, but I think the Positive Passage (available through Procaps Labs) may be more effective for menopause. -- You may want to give his coustomer service department a call; they're very knowledgeable.
--
Right up until the very end of menopause it was smooth sailing for me... until one day I fell right off the cliff. My moods were off the scale, I would cry for no reason and I thought that maybe I was having a breakdown. I knew a fair amount about nutrition and supplements by then and I kept trying new products without any success. I never suspected menopause because my other symptoms has all vanished.
One day I tried a supplement that had a tiny amount of pregnonelone in it and my body did a happy dance. I had to go through all the ingredients in the supplement before I understood that my body was reacting to the pregnonelone which is a precursur to progersterone which is key to making the adrenal glands work (when the ovaries finally close shop, your body uses the adrenal glands to keep hormonal activity fluid).
I started taking Royal Maca by Whole World Botanicals. Maca is a key factor to making pregnonelone, which is the precorsur to progersterone, etc. I worried about not getting the right dosage of bio-identical hormones, so I thought that if I gave my body enough of one of the precursurs I would be less likely to be using an incorrect dosage. I basically trusted my body to take what it needed and it worked.
Within about 10 minutes after my first tieeny tiny Maca dose I started to feel better. I was back to normal in 2-3 days (really!!). -- My rapid hair loss stopped inside of 2 weeks (I lost 1/3 of my hair in about 6 weeks) and about half of it grew back. If I remember correctly, there is an overproduction of a particular enzyme that helps creat male pattern baldness. It can have the same effect on menopausal women. Maca has the ability to counteract it. Clearly, it worked with me. -- Maca (along with nattokynese) helped literally crumble my fibroids. -- To this day, I still take Maca daily.
If you decide to try Maca make sure you use a cooked maca (more bioavailable), start very small and increase very slowly. Start with 1/16 of a teaspoon daily and titrate up to a max of 1/2 teaspoon daily over a period of 6 weeks. When you feel balanced then just maintain that dosage. Maca is an adaptagen and overdosing can have an opposite effect.
--
I also stopped eating starch carbs (grains) and sugar products (cakes, candy, even high sugar fruits). My feeling was that most carbs -- with the exception of the rainbow of veggies -- break down into simple sugar fairly easily and just aren't good for the body (for more on this, check out Doug Kauffman's Know The Cause). Essentially I switched over to an Atkins diet... and, no, Atkins never advocated eating a pound of bacon a day.
These days it's been rebranded as the Paleolythic diet. Now I eat eggs (from organically raised chicken who eat worms and seeds) in the morning. And have 4 oz of meat in the evening (from organically raised, grass fed cows). -- I have a Vitamix and blend about a quart of green smoothie a day, and snack on nuts and seeds. It sounds extreme but my body actually craves these foods. And, of course, Andrew Lessman's supplements.
Best of luck with your menopause journey!!
-- bebe ![]()
‎07-13-2015 07:32 PM
I scanned the responses really quickly so sorry if I am repeating but I don't think anyone mentioned that a switch to more seasonals means more protein. That can break your hair if it is too much protein for you. The seasonals are more treatment based. I think that you should stop using seasonals for the time being and stick with TT for growth and your soy-based POM. Maybe for 2-3 months and see if after the next 2 -3 weeks or so this doesn't start to reverse and you start seeing new growth. That is the first thing that popped out at me right away. Some people cannot take all that protein. You may then want to check how you do with the BGT and MIF or kids being rice-based. If that doesn't work, or you are too dry, I think you will have arrived at the issue. You may not need to stop using WEN, you just may need to fine tune what works for you. If you want advice from the horse's mouth, call the salon. The number is on the back of the bottle and they will be glad to help.
‎07-13-2015 07:36 PM
Luckily I haven't had hot flashes. I did have the night sweats once. I used to always be so warm, but now I'm always cold. It got so bad that I was checked for anemia (not anemia). The worst has been having my period for 2 months straight! Now I haven't had it in over 3 months. My mood swings seem to be evening out in the last 2 months. Prior to that I warned people to stay away from me because just about everything annoyed me! I'm a pretty easy going and patient person, so way out of my norm. My doctor told me that if I felt like killing my husband that he would prescribe something. Lol
‎07-13-2015 07:49 PM
I think to start I will continue to use shampoo on my scalp and wen on my length and see how that goes. I should be able to either point to or rule out WEN if I do that for a couple of months. If I still continue to lose a lot I'll call the doctor. I'll just keep an eye on things. It just freaked me out to see my hair thin out so much. I'm kind of known for my hair in my small little circle of family and friends. I know it's just hair, but I feel like it's part of my identity. Thanks for everyone's helpful suggestions and I will definitely consider what everyone said.
‎07-13-2015 10:01 PM
‎07-14-2015 05:45 PM
First and foremost, my empathy is with you! Hair is such a part of us. It must be so scary to be losing it and not be sure why. I'm so glad you are following up with a physician!
I have two other things to offer just as personal experience. One, is that I found out the hard way that I am very allergic to tea tree oil, which is in a surprising amount of things. I found out not through Wen, but through a facial cleanser. I used it and my face felt so clean! The next day it was all itchy, red, and angry. At the time, I didn't make the connection, so I used it another day - the next day I had angry skin. I discontinued use (obviously) but it took 2 weeks to fully clear. Mind you, I have excellent skin I inhereted. I maybe got one blemish a month even in my worst teen years. I thought it was the combined cleanser until the day I used a single tea tree based cleansing pad - like setting my face on fire! This is a really long way of saying that tea tree is great if it works for you, but if it doesn't it is really awful. Or, at least it was for me!
The other thing is that I notice my hair coming out when I cleanse a lot more with Wen because I am paying attention to it. I have also noticed over time that it doesn't come out any other time, and now that my scalp has acclimated I feel like I have more hair. That may be of no use, but maybe there is just a curve.
Either way, I hope you get your answer soon. Wishing you health and lush hair!
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