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STRESS
As the body's nervous system receives ever-increasing stresses, the synapses
begin to short, disconnecting nerves. The liver and kidneys becoming overworked,
the capillary vessels become thinner and thinner, unable to carry sufficient
supplies of keratin to the follicle. The follicle, then, sprouts progressively
thinner hairs until nerve completely disconnects and follicle becomes
inactive/dead.
Stresses are received by the nervous system through the five sensory organs
(eyes, ears, nose, skin & tongue) and perceived by the brain. Whenever
the nerves affiliated with the given sensory organ are overwhelmed with
stimuli, the organ loses healthy function and the body and mind perceive
a stress. This inspires a constant discomfort.

DNA
To lose hair or become bald is NOT blueprinted in DNA. Rather, lifestyle
(environment, relations, diet, sleep & stress release) serves as a
powerful force to either maintain a healthy body as is predetermined in
the DNA, or, conversely, to destroy the various functional capacities
throughout the body.
HORMONES
Like vitamins, hormones are necessary components of a healthy body. As
such, healthy hair growth, too, necessitates sufficient hormones as one
part of its cycle. Hormones are to nerves much like oil is to a machine.
They allow for a smooth operation. Hormones, alone, do not cause hair
loss. Evidentiary Example: When a man gets a sex change, he is manipulating
his hormone balance to the like of a woman. Yet, he may still become bald
if his nervous system is constantly overwhelmed by stresses.
WHY DO MORE MEN HAVE HAIR LOSS THAN WOMEN?
Fundamentally, women have a higher tolerance threshold to receiving physical
stress (child labor) and are more inclined to release their daily stresses
in various and creative ways. This has served as one of the reasons for
the discrepancy in the hair loss populus by gender. However, in recent
years, the trend increase of women in the workplace or stressful environments
with less and less time to release stress is equal to the trend incline
of hair loss in women. Today, in America, 40 million men and over 25 million
women are losing their hair.
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