This is called
the scientifically correct hair treatment.
It simply works for all the right reasons. I was already aware of using
apple cider vinegar. If you must use
white vinegar, dilute it much more. I
was not aware of the baking soda trick.
The real
interesting take home here is that it reduces hair treatment down to a sane
once a week. This is a scant price to
pay for a healthy head of hair and no shampoo in your cupboard.
I will add
something else here. Baking soda and vinegar will draw the garbage from your
hair follicles as well, plausibly stimulating some hair restoration for
recently lost hair.
This is as
simple as it gets and I do recommend it.
What I've
Learned From Three Years Without Shampoo
When I wrote about quitting shampoo over two and a half years ago, I was a
relatively recent convert to the natural-hair game.
Here’s what I knew then: You go through a terrible
phase where you don’t wash your hair at all. When that phase is over, you do
the following instead of using shampoo: put baking soda in your hair, rinse it
out, put apple-cider vinegar in your hair, rinse it out. Repeat once every 5–7
days, washing with just water in the meantime. Boom bam boom, the end.
That’s all still true, but now that I’m a seasoned
veteran (kind of literally, because of the vinegar), I thought I’d divulge the
seven most important lessons I’ve learned in the years since that first post.
1. Well, the first lesson is my hair looks
ridiculously good now.
After about three years without shampoo, my hair is
noticeably softer and fluffier than it used to be. I never use any product—I
just blow-dry it with a finger diffuser and it stays in beautiful perfect waves
all day. And when you know your hair looks great, it’s like a magical
girl-power spell that grants you confidence and erases worries about the rest
of your looks.
Something I didn’t anticipate is that my hair is
also several shades blonder, to the point that people regularly ask me if it’s
my natural hair color. It’s weird to realize that yes, it is my natural hair
color, and the borderline-brown dirty blond from before was artificially
darkened by shampoo. Or rather by grease that shampoo caused my scalp to
overproduce, because the human body is a soggy box of horrors.
2. Quitting shampoo works because of science.
Remember pH from high-school chemistry class? If you
don’t, here’s the tl;dr version. The pH scale goes from 0 to 14. Water sits in
the middle with a neutral 7; anything below that is acidic and anything above
is basic or alkaline. Human skin needs to be slightly
acidic to prevent
fungus and bacteria from colonizing your life. When you use baking soda (a
base) and then apple-cider vinegar (an acid), your scalp’s pH remains stable
and its oil production stays low. That’s why your hair keeps cleaner longer.
(It’s also why you don’t use white vinegar: it’s too acidic.)
What’s tricky about this is that they intentionally
manufacture shampoo to be slightly acidic—that’s what it means when you see
stuff like “pH balanced” on the bottle. But some of the ingredients they usually
use, particularly sulfates, will still strip away the oils from your hair,
causing your scalp to overproduce oils despite the friendly pH. I don’t know. I
got an A in high-school chemistry, but they didn’t cover hair-care products,
the sexist pigs.
3. The magic ratio is 50/50.
Take a bottle and fill it with half baking soda,
half water. Then take another bottle and fill it with half apple-cider vinegar,
half water. Keep the bottles in your shower. This seems to be the optimal level
of dilution—not too basic, not too acidic (though of course all our individual
scalps require their own unique and disgusting balance of oils, fungus, and
bacteria). Shake before using as the materials will separate. Use as much as
you need.
4. The part of your hair that isn’t touching your
head doesn’t really get dirty.
I mean, it does a little, and you do have to wash
it, of course. But your scalp is where things are really happening (“things” =
sebum blasting forth from your sebaceous glands). For both the baking soda and
vinegar steps of the process, focus on the roots of your hair, not the tips.
The bright side is that even if you haven’t washed your hair in a while, you
can just wear a hat or even a wide headband—the rest of your hair will look
more or less fine, because it’ll be all soft and fluffy from not using shampoo.
5. The more you sweat, the more often you’ll need to wash your hair.
This one’s pretty self-explanatory. If you work out
a lot, or live somewhere hot and humid, you’ll probably have to wash your hair
more than once a week. But probably not more than twice a week.
6. Beautiful hair is at your fingertips.
Your fingernails are almost as important to the
process as the baking soda and vinegar. They scrub your shampoo substitutes
into your scalp and help clear a little hair gunk out when you’re just rinsing
with water between washings. I apply my baking soda mix to a small section of
my scalp, gently scratch it in, apply it to another small section, gently
scratch it in, and continue like that until my whole head is covered. Same for
the vinegar. You don’t have to have big long claws or anything. Mine are always
bitten down to nubs, and they do the job just fine—though the vinegar stings
like a whole hive of bees on freshly picked-at hangnails.
7. I have never failed the smell test.
There are two kinds of people in this world: those
who will bury their noses in a stranger’s hair at a party, and those who won’t.
I’ve encountered a lot of the former, and tempted a lot of the latter. It
actually comes up pretty often because people compliment my hair all the time
now (seriously, you guys, it looks so good!), and then I’m like, “Well, let me
tell you a fun secret.”
Some people are content to take my word for it, but
I am always happy to let anyone cuddle up and see for themselves that my hair
doesn’t smell like vinegar. It doesn’t smell like pomegranate rainwater or
whatever, either. It just smells like nice, neutral, clean hair. People are
always surprised, but seriously, diluted apple-cider vinegar is way less gross
than your body. Shampoo, on the other hand, just makes you grosser. Quit it. I
dare you.
Lauren
O'Neal is the
Rumpus's assistant editor. Her writing has appeared in publications
like Slate, the New Inquiry, and Corium Magazine. She's
currently pursuing an MFA in creative writing in San Francisco. You can follow
her on Twitter here.
No comments:
Post a Comment