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harshaxnim | 1 year ago

Still doesn’t answer - How does the follicle know that I cut my hair and needs to grow again to that length?

discuss

order

someotherperson|1 year ago

It doesn't know. Hair cycles are constant. If you didn't cut it, it would eventually fall out as it is replaced by another hair. It grows to the point where the epithelial column contracts and starts forcing it out. This is based on environment, nutrition and genetics and varies from person to person and is affected by everything from stress to blood flow.

You can observe this on many people by looking at hair miniaturization of people who have MBP or similar -- the follicle constricts in size and the resulting hair that comes out is progressively shorter in length and diameter until the follicle is so constricted that it no longer produces hair.

ars|1 year ago

It doesn't. Hair grows for a certain amount of time - time, not length. Then waits for a while unchanging, then falls out.

growth (3 to 6 years) -> static (2 to 3 months) -> fall out -> rest -> start over

The maximum length of your hair is determined by how long it stays in the growing phase, in general this phase is longer in females than in males. And some people are naturally able to grow longer hair than others.

In pregnant females the static time is increased, i.e. the hair stays there without falling out. This makes their thick and full. After delivery this changes and the hair falls out in clumps, which is unpleasant, but it's the same hair that would have anyway fallen out earlier, it's not extra hair falling out.

If you cut the hair nothing changes, it still grows for as long as it was going to originally.

That myth about cutting hair (or shaving) to make it grow faster or whatever is not real.

incompatible|1 year ago

Interesting. I've occasionally wondered why my hair (from scalp) can reach barely half way down my back, even after leaving it for decades uncut, while other people (typically women?) can grow it to the floor.

tmnvix|1 year ago

This doesn't seem right. If I use clippers to trim hair on my body, it grows back to its 'natural' length. I don't end up with hair of various lengths. Likewise, if I shave it, I don't end up with some stubble and some regular hairs.

I've never experienced a time where I've trimmed body hair and had it remain the same length for a couple of months.

mkaic|1 year ago

IIUC, it doesn't. Hair grows for a certain time period, falls out, and regrows. The follicle has no knowledge of the length of the hair it is producing, it is simply on a grow-stop-shed cycle with a certain period.

guerrilla|1 year ago

So hairs are actually excretions, like sweat and shit.

bdamm|1 year ago

There are possible physical answers; it could be lack of inertia on the hair triggers growth. It could be that when you rub your arm, an action as innocent as a yawn, you are also informing the growth of hair. Could it be as simple as looking at your hair or knowledge of shaving causes a subconscious trigger? We already know that these high level shortcuts into low level processes exist (Pavlov's dog anyone?)

ars|1 year ago

It's none of those. Read the sibling replies to your comment.