Friday, April 19, 2019

Has Your Hair Reached Its Terminal Length?



Short answer: NO.

Continue!>>>


‘Terminal Length’ is a concept I did not understand until very recently. When I started growing my hair out in uni, it started breaking when it reached a comfortable shoulder length. Just a little below the shoulder. Then, I was relaxed. I went natural and it was all good in the first 2 years, but since my hair reached that below the shoulder length again sometime before my 2nd natural hair anniversary, it appears to have stopped growing. Has it really though?

No. Not because I’m a fighter (I am) but because, your present hair length is actually not your cut off point even if you’ve been there for ever. It is NOT your terminal length.

Your present hair length is not your last bus stop even if you've been stuck here for ever!

How do I know you haven’t reached your terminal length? What am I even saying?
Think about this. After my last 4 trims, my hair was always at the same length. With each trim, I lost 2-3 inches of hair. If I lost hair and my hair was still the same length after this loss, clearly, it had been growing. This does not even take into account the “minor breakage” I deal with everytime I handle my hair. Oprah What Is The Truth gif

What IS Terminal Length?
Simply put, Terminal length is the longest any hair on your head can grow. It’s the length your hair would be if you never cut it, if it never broke.

Hmm. So, what is this like?

Science says that the growing phase for hair is anything between 1 and 7 years. For most people, the average growing phase is between 4-6 years, and this probably includes you. Science also tells us that hair grows at 1/4 to 1/2 an inch every month on average.

Stay with me now.

So, let’s imagine your hair is pretty average, capable of growing 1/4 inch a month. 1/4 inch a month x 12 months leaves you with 3 inches a year- in theory. After 4 years, in a perfect world at the slowest rate, where your strands are Spartans and retain every bit of keratin, you should expect to have 12 inches, easily below the shoulder at full stretch. Not bad eh?

I may not know you, or your (hair) story, but, I’m willing to bet that you aren’t at your Terminal Length.
From my own experience, I think I grew about 4-6 inches of hair during my 8 month transition to natural hair. I retained all my length because I still had relaxed ends to chop off. 6 inches in 8 months. Clearly, at one point in time, my growth rate was above average.

If you are a relaxed girl or used to be one, think about it. In 2 weeks, your hair is “due” again. That undergrowth is new hair. It is GROWTH. Imagine if you retained ALL that, for the length of your growth cycle (which is probably 4-6 years), where would you be? THAT, my friend, is your terminal length.

Our hair growth is affected by so many factors, some we can control, like nutrition, blood circulation, stress levels. Others are beyond us, like genetics, hormones, certain health conditions. Length retention is a different piece of cake entirely, and that is entirely on us.

So, sista-girl, can you really say you’ve reached your terminal length? The point you absolutely cannot grow past? I doubt it.

Terminal length is the longest any hair on your head can grow.
If like me, you have been needing motivation to grow your hair or move past a length plateau, I hope this is it! 🙂 You can totally figure this hair thing out! Retaining length is another discussion which we will have but till then, let’s keep hope alive, okay?


from Natural Hair Care | Curly Nikki http://bit.ly/2e7iVtQ

No comments:

Post a Comment