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How Foremost Is Hair Loss To Young and Older People When Described At First Look

By: cindycut

Lots of folks experiencing hair loss think that they don’t measure up. They feel different. Articulated as a feeling of not belonging --- the difference that they go through impacts their social interactions, emotions of self-worth, also beliefs regarding their physical attractiveness. When Shelby was reflecting on her teenage years, she said that she wouldn’t go to parties or hang out with a crowd. “I didn’t like to be around groups of people. Everything is changing. Here you are fifteen or sixteen years old, and all of a sudden everyone is getting asked out. I never actually dated anyone. I was ashamed. I felt ashamed since I was different.”

Bart said that he, too, felt out of place when he was in a crowd of people, male or female.

In situations like being in a class full of other people, you know --- it would tend to make me a little quieter, or a little more self-conscious than I ordinarily would have been --- just the feeling of being different --- also people are looking at you because your’re not fitting into the crowd of something.

Dan appeared to feel that he was excluded not only from mixed groups but also from groups of males.

When your’re younger, groups are formed a lot of times on popularity --- your own attractiveness or whatever --- and it just kinda makes me feel like you’re out of groups just plainly because of your appearance, which you had no control over. If baldness is the drawback, you were predisposed. Good-looking guys will, a lot of times, be with other good-looking guys. Furthermore if there’s a manner of mind-set in society that being bald is not appealing, then you could worry that you’re gonna be precluded from some groups as they’re gonna be concerned that being with you makes them seem less attractive or something --- I’ve noticed that enough times in my life.

Rodney enjoyed a full head of hair all through high school, then experienced rapid hair loss the summer prior to attending his state university.

Here I was, a young guy who had always had long hair, was very interested in having it styled in the newest trend, was very concerned with his appearance. I went from being on the king of the hill in high school to feeling. “Oh, gee, I’m resting on the bottom of the pool here,”

It is interesting how human beings as a species have managed to connect so much power and symbolism to hair. Compared to other parts of the body, but, it isn’t too hard to figure out. Our hair is a feathery adornment with which we can express ourselves - a silent emissary, one with a apparent and distinct message. And when an individual is losing (or has lost) his or her hair, all of the very creative possibilities for making the hair (or social) statement of his or her choice are finished. Mike, who is experiencing male pattern baldness, said, “I think it comes down to options.” Theresa agreed. “There’s no freedom… if you’re losing your hair, you’re dreadfully restricted… you feel confined…you feel caged.”

One’s physical looks is, no doubt, the most easily noticeable feature of being human and the one that is generally apt to create or influence an impression, especially a initial impression. Because hair is a major characteristic of one’s appearance (as we are almost always physically described by the color and length of their hair, among other identifying qualities), considerable hair loss is likely to be noticed right away and filed in the observer’s memory, along with feelings and character perceptions about the balding individual. We hold assumptions and attitudes on physical attributes and readily, often nonconsciously, sort people into a variety of cognitive categories or prototypes. These appearance-cued first impressions can act as a funnel, through which added perceptions, expectations, emotions, and social behaviors are channeled. Consequently, first impressions persist in the eye of the beholder to the degree that they set the stage for self-confirming, cognitive, and social behavioral processes. Cindycut can help.

Article Source: http://www.newsarticlessite.com

Cindy Lee is a hair replacement specialist and educator with over 28 years experience in the field www.cindycut.com

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