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I thought No-lye was better?
The difference is that boxed relaxers contain calcium hydroxide (straightening agent). As it was explained to us when I was in cosmetology school is calcium makes your bones hard so what makes you think it won't make the cuticles of your hair hard as well. Many of us here are really good about conditioning so we may not notice the difference unlike someone who doesn't know how to properly take care of relaxed hair. The straightening agent in salon quality relaxers is sodium hydroxide which is better for hair. Sodium hydroxide is also the agent used to clear drains (Drano) which is why people say if it can clear a drain then what makes you think it won't take the hair off your head. But anyway...that's what I was taught.
No offense, but this is illogical.
Just because calcium makes bones hard doesn't equate to it making your hair hard. If you purposely eat calcium-rich foods, does that mean that your digestive organs will become hard? No. The way calcium deposits (and is removed) from your bones is not necessarily the same as the chemical reaction of sodium-chloride on your hair during the relaxing process....maybe someone with a science background can chime in here
Personally, I would take anything learned in cosmetology school with a grain of salt. It's stylist who are burning people's hair off with lye relaxers right and left, claiming it's "better for their hair." Ok..........
Both types of relaxers (lye and no-lye) are caustic chemicals that can dissolve substances and damage your hair. The best bet is to make sure the person doing the application is applying the right kind of relaxer for you and knows how apply it properly.