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myco said:
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pradalover said:
The key IMO is not to think that the re-growth will 'act' the same way as the relaxed hair. If you try to fight with the re-growth then thats when you may experience breakage.
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I agree. Having newgrowth does not cause breakage, but how you treat it does.
A lot of times the techniques that people use (blowdrying, brushing, flat-ironing or hot curling on super high temperatures) to try and make the two textures match can cause a lot of the breakage.
I like 12 weeks because it spaces out my touch-ups nicely, but after 12 weeks it becomes more time-consuming than I would like to style my hair.
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I agree too. I am 4b and use to think I HAD to get that touchup by week 6. I'd be fighting the new growth to behave like the relaxed hair and that required HEAT like all the time and of course, that causes breakage. I relaxed every 6 weeks like clockwork and my hair STILL didn't grow past neck and so when I started hitting the boards and doing my own research, it just seemed worth trying something different cause the so-called professional advice I'd been getting was simply not giving me long hair. Anywho, I've learned to stretch my relaxer to 10 weeks without massave breakage by basically working with the two textures and not trying the make the new growth "straight" but rather to just keep it soft and detangled. My hair is now just past my shoulders (I would have more, but had to do "little chops" along the way to get rid of split/damaged ends but I'm seeing improvement every day and I'm patient -- I anticipate brastrap within the next year!) My next goal is to see how can I stretch 2 more weeks to 12 weeks so that I'm only relaxing 4 times a year. The only way I know to do this for my hair after 10 weeks is to braid it up, but we'll see . . .