Thursday, 7 February 2013

Follow These Steps To Make Black Hair Grow Long

By Jenny Mays


Women of African descent may that it is impossible to make black hair grow long. This is false. But black women use many many practices that prevent hair growth. In order to grow your tresses as a black woman, the following are some great tips to grow long black hair.

Characteristics

Being able to make black hair grow long requires an understanding first of the black hair structure and characteristics. This hair type varies from curly to kinky with tightly coiled strands. This curly and kinky structure means that it is next to impossible for sebum or oil to travel from the sebaceous (oil) glands in the scalp to the ends of the tresses. The inability of the sebum to travel from the roots to the ends to moisturize the strands is one of the main causes of the excessive dryness of black hair.

With straighter strands, the sebum is able to easily travel from the roots to the ends which helps to keep the tresses moisturized. When hair is well moisturized, it does not break off easily.

The dry tresses that most black people have makes it difficult but not impossible to grow long tresses. This is due to the fact that when the strands are dry, they can easily break or snap off. Over time, you may think that your hair is just not growing but hair is constantly growing. It is just that because the strands are excessively dry, the ends are breaking off at the same rate that it is growing which means that your tresses will remain at relatively the same length year after year.

In order to be able to grow long black hair, you need to be able to limit this breakage which means being able to more or less manage the dryness of the strands by keeping it moisturized on a consistent basis. Having moisturized tresses means that your ends will not break easily which will mean that you shall be able to grow your hair to longer lengths.

Tips to Keep Hair Moisturized

1. Do not shampoo frequently. This will just make already dry strands even drier and cause more breakage. Once or twice a week is sufficient when you have dry strands.

2. A moisturizing shampoo is more beneficial to combat dryness as it will clean the strands while moisturizing your tresses.

3. Consider co-washing your hair which entails using a conditioner and not a shampoo to cleanse the hair. Using a conditioner to wash your hair will help to keep the strands moisturized.

4. Dry tresses are very fragile so ensure that when cleansing, you handle the strands very gently. Wet strands are also very fragile and will break off is not gently handled.

5. Deep condition your tresses at least once or twice a month to add needed moisture to the strands.

6. For severely dry strands, consider implementing a hot oil treatment on a weekly basis using olive oil, safflower oil, grape seed oil, castor oil, argan oil, coconut oil, etc. A lot of these oils can penetrate the hair strands to help moisturize the hair.

7. A leave in conditioner should be used after cleansing and blotting out excess water in order to help moisturize the strands further.

8. Lock in the moisture after applying a leave in conditioner by adding oil such as olive, argan, coconut, castor, etc, to the strands in order to prevent the moisture from escaping from the strands easily.

9. In order to prevent environmental elements from drying out your tresses, consider implementing a "protective style." This is a hair style such as keeping the strands in buns, braids, in twists and many other styles that will prevent the ends of the hair from being exposed to the elements, drying out and breaking.

10. Due to heating tools being very drying, eliminate or reduce the use of heating tools




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