You only cut your hair once every six months! Even if you sport a rather lengthy mane (which I’m assuming you do) once every six months seems way too infrequent.
Even if you sport a rather lengthy mane (which I’m assuming you do) once every six months seems way too infrequent.
Six months isn’t enough time to grow a lengthy mane! As I recall, it took much longer than that for me to grow my ponytail, and various internet sources confirm that hair grows at about six inches per year. (I haven’t had a haircut since late 2006, but my hair seems to have maxed out in length some time ago.)
I wasn’t saying that it would become lengthy in 6 months, but that any haircut which can be maintained for 6 months without a trim has to be a lengthy one. My understanding is that, to maintain healthy hair, it is recommended you get a trim once a month (for split ends and what not.) I keep my hair fairly short (clippers on the side, “finger” length on top) and get a trim once every few weeks (I taught myself how to cut my own hair to make this more convient and affordable. Also, my sister is a cosmetologist so she can fix any mistakes I make when I see her.)
Though, now that I think about it, this is one of those cached thoughts that people (“experts”) have told me, but I don’t actually have hard evidence for.
In relation to the last bit, I suspect that the bit about ‘healthy hair’ is something in the cached thoughts/no evidence category. I haven’t had a haircut in something like five years, and while my hair would probably look a bit better if the ends were trimmed to be even, there’s nothing about it that seems unhealthy to me—the only noticeable change in that time is that it used to be wavy when it was short and straight when it was long, and now it’s somewhat curly (more than just wavy) even though it’s rather long. (I’m more inclined to attribute that to having moved to a more humid climate than to the lack of haircuts, especially given that I wasn’t getting it cut particularly often even back when it was straight.)
There could very easily be evidence that I don’t know of, but it’s a data point.
In the past I’ve had haircuts roughly that frequently. On the tail end my hair was a bit long but there wasn’t any noticeable difference in romantic luck (not that there was ever very much to speak of).
You only cut your hair once every six months! Even if you sport a rather lengthy mane (which I’m assuming you do) once every six months seems way too infrequent.
Six months isn’t enough time to grow a lengthy mane! As I recall, it took much longer than that for me to grow my ponytail, and various internet sources confirm that hair grows at about six inches per year. (I haven’t had a haircut since late 2006, but my hair seems to have maxed out in length some time ago.)
I wasn’t saying that it would become lengthy in 6 months, but that any haircut which can be maintained for 6 months without a trim has to be a lengthy one. My understanding is that, to maintain healthy hair, it is recommended you get a trim once a month (for split ends and what not.) I keep my hair fairly short (clippers on the side, “finger” length on top) and get a trim once every few weeks (I taught myself how to cut my own hair to make this more convient and affordable. Also, my sister is a cosmetologist so she can fix any mistakes I make when I see her.)
Though, now that I think about it, this is one of those cached thoughts that people (“experts”) have told me, but I don’t actually have hard evidence for.
In relation to the last bit, I suspect that the bit about ‘healthy hair’ is something in the cached thoughts/no evidence category. I haven’t had a haircut in something like five years, and while my hair would probably look a bit better if the ends were trimmed to be even, there’s nothing about it that seems unhealthy to me—the only noticeable change in that time is that it used to be wavy when it was short and straight when it was long, and now it’s somewhat curly (more than just wavy) even though it’s rather long. (I’m more inclined to attribute that to having moved to a more humid climate than to the lack of haircuts, especially given that I wasn’t getting it cut particularly often even back when it was straight.)
There could very easily be evidence that I don’t know of, but it’s a data point.
In the past I’ve had haircuts roughly that frequently. On the tail end my hair was a bit long but there wasn’t any noticeable difference in romantic luck (not that there was ever very much to speak of).