FelaShrine
I made a few posts (
1 and
2) but they're all over the place as I was reading from the notes I took... Which were also all over the place. I didn't feel like going back and cleaning it up.
There are some images in the first post, I wanted to show the difference in thickness between my natural and texlaxed hair.
To sum up:
Turns out my hair is healthy, it was just dealing with the difference in textures and porosity that was causing issues. She did notice that my strands are growing in a little thinner. Apparently hair can change every 5 - 7 years. I thought I was having internal issues, nope, normal.
My natural hair is low porosity and my texlaxed hair is normal to high. Rene said it's mostly normal and the "high" sections are probably from mechanical damage (I had some mid-shaft splits on the sides). This is why I'm VERY tempted to do like some of the ladies in this thread and try a perm. hair color to raise my porosity. I'm just worried about damage, especially with my texlaxed ends.
I didn't ask about my hair type while other LHCF lades reported that they did. I don't care, I realize that porosity matters much more.
A few ladies in this thread hate Roux Porosity Control. It should be called Roux High Porosity Control, it just makes our issues worse. I was using it before/after texlaxing and my hair loved it back then. She compared my hair before and after and said it really strengthened my hair. She's recommending I use that or another protein treatment during my transition, every two weeks. My hair has to stay strong to deal with both textures. Once I BC or texlax (I was undecided at the time so I got tips for both
) I can do it less often, every 3 months.
Rene stated that I have hair from 10 to 15 inches long. It's normal for there to be a difference based on where the hair is located; however, the huge difference is most likely due to my breakage in the back. She gave me an average length of my hair, I just can't remember the number.
She also went over the list of vitamins and supplements I reported, and let me know which were really important and why. Not just for hair, general health too.
Oh, there was an ingredient in Aphogee 2-Step that she didn't like. I need to go dig out my notes because she told me which type of proteins would work best with LOPO hair since others are too large. I kept it in mind when revamping my regi now I can't remember.
More LOPO aspects:
- I should mist my hair at night. Our hair takes a while to get wet and then takes forever to dry. She said if I do it at night my hair should be dry (or almost dry) by the morning. Then I can use my creamy leave-in if my hair needs some moisture.
- She said to give up on cowashing because it doesn't work well with our hair. I mean, it makes sense but I've still done it a few times when I needed some moisture between DCs.
- She wants me to find the right "wetness" before I add my products. Several ladies have discussed this in this thread. If the hair is too damp the product stays on top, if it's too dry then we're probably dealing with shrinkage and SSK.