- Reaction score
- 168
Read again but slowly and have your magnifier at your disposal, I said in my case f*****
Believe it or not, idc. But what Renovation is saying is true and applicable in my case.
One day I slept furrowing, I woke up with debilitating nerve pain like symptoms.
I've had tensed my eyebrows & frontalis.
That's what have triggered my Androgenetic Alopecia.
That's interesting, I trace my thinning back to 2007, exactly when I had minor neck injury. It took me years to put 2 and 2 together.
For anyone not having neck pain, there's still probably a disconnect occuring between shoulder muscles, sternomastoid muscles and muscles of front side and back of head you mentioned surrounding gelea, and this is likely not always even visable.
Recently I've been to some conferences and shows and sat near the back, I'd estimate 90 percent of balding men have had similar look neck and off centre head posture. And 90 percent with no hair loss have great posture.
It's 100 percent a major factor for most people. I think there's more to it, but all linked.
I have yet to see a single person who has a soft and pliable scalp and is bald. If anyone disagreeing with me can post a video this id love to see it. For anyone who is in doubt, inflammation of the scalp means it's not pliable and underneath is calcified/fibrosis(it doesn't mean it's red and blistering)!
Inflamation^DHT^hairloss. The key is that inflammation comes first NOT DHT!
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