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jasira
Apr 8th, 2008, 01:07 PM
Don't know if anyone has heard of this method. Thought I would share...


No Poo (that’s shampoo)
December 20, 2006, 4:23 pm
Filed under: Lifestyle

I have not shampooed my hair for about 3 years. Yep, it’s true. But if you saw me, you probably wouldn’t notice.

Sound gross? It’s not! I actually have a very clean scalp and very clean, healthy hair. How? I wash my scalp and hair with baking soda. Interested? Keep reading.

Why Ditch the Shampoo?
The real goal in hair washing is to get the scalp clean, and manage hair oils. We’ll talk about the specifics of how the “no poo” method accomplishes these goals in a minute. But first, let’s consider how shampoo works. Traditional shampoos strip hair of natural oils. But hair oils (and other body oils) are largely produced as needed – so if you’re constantly stripping your hair and scalp of their natural oils, your body will boost production to make up for it. This leads to an increased need for shampoo! And so you get caught in a circle…you use shampoo, your body makes more oil for your scalp, your hair gets greasy, you need to wash your hair again, you use shampoo, your body makes more oil…etc.

(You might also be interested to know that many shampoos contain potentially harmful ingredients - Look up ingredients and brands here)

So how does this work?
The No Poo method tackles the goals of a clean scalp and managed hair oils in a slightly different way. The scalp is cleaned using gentle cleansers such as baking soda. And the scalp and hair are allowed to return to their natural oil balance, which usually eliminates the problems of dry or oily hair.


My Personal Methodology
When I first started, following instructions I found at mothering.com, I mixed up a baking soda paste by adding a bit of water to a handful of baking soda and scrubbing it into my scalp just as I would shampoo. Eventually, I realized that it was much easier to scrub the baking soda into my scalp when my (considerably long) hair was dry, so I began washing my dry hair before getting into the shower to rinse. (As an added bonus, this method also saves water as well as the gas used to power our water heater!)

After rinsing thoroughly in the hottest water I can stand, I rinse with diluted apple cider vinegar. (My early mistake was not diluting the vinegar enough, earning me the nickname of Fish and Chips around the house.) These days, I fill a water bottle about ¼ full with vinegar, then fill the rest with water. I also add a few drops of essential oils – usually lavender, since I have that on hand and it smells nice. I keep this concoction in a sports-cap water bottle in the shower and squeeze some over my hair, then rinse out well.

I don’t use any hair products at all, and I try to brush my hair morning and night – gently and with a natural bristle brush to help distribute the oils produced by my scalp down to the ends of my hair where it is most needed. I currently wash my scalp about once a week, and rinse my hair one additional time during the week. My hair begins to get just a little oily the day before I wash, but it is generally only noticeable to me. Before I went no poo, I needed to wash at least every other day or I had greasy, unmanageable, and just plain gross hair!

Getting Started
If you’re thinking about trying this method, be forewarned! Most people experience a week or two of “icky hair” while their scalp struggles to adjust to the new routine. I did not experience this transition time, but many do. If you can outlast this period, though, you’ll be rewarded with beautiful, all natural hair and scalp!

Here are some basic instructions on living “no poo.”

Rinse your hair daily with hot water and brush with a natural bristle brush.
As often as needed (for some people, this is every few days, for some once a week is enough), scrub scalp with a baking soda paste and rinse well.
Rinse hair with diluted vinegar (apple cider vinegar smells nicer).
Take good care of your hair between washings by brushing gently and minimizing the use of hair products.
If the simple baking-soda-and-vinegar routine doesn’t seem to work for you, here are some variations on the basic routine that some people have found helpful:

Add a honey scalp massage to help with dry hair or itchy scalp
Wash with an egg instead of baking soda.
Use beer instead of vinegar.
Use a rosemary essential oil infusion instead of vinegar.
Use lime or lemon juice instead of vinegar.
Use some essential oil on the very ends of hair to cut down on frizzies and dry ends.
There are now quite a few blogs about not using shampoo. (and there are always a few threads on no poo at Mothering.)

Not for You?
If ditching the shampoo is not for you, but you’re interested in using less-toxic products for cleaning your hair and scalp, you might consider the great Shampoo Bars made by Heart of Iowa Soapworks and sold by PrairieLand Herbs.

brunes
Apr 9th, 2008, 06:09 PM
This m akes a broad assumption that everyone's hair/oil/scalp balence is perfect. This is not true. I for one have very oily hair.

You can easily judge the oiliness of your scalp by growing out your beard for a few days and seeing how slick it is.

eskimono
Apr 9th, 2008, 06:46 PM
lol, i'm gonna try this. Thanks jasira, enjoyed your contribution.

stevethewheel
Apr 9th, 2008, 09:01 PM
hagbard has been doing this for months. I don't know if his thread is still kicking around.

eskimono
Apr 10th, 2008, 11:07 PM
hagbard has been doing this for months. I don't know if his thread is still kicking around.Here we go: http://www.redflagdeals.com/forums/showthread.php?p=6679921#post6679921

Picked up a pack of Arm & Hammer baking soda. Gonna start :),

Wish me luck.

jasira
Apr 11th, 2008, 02:55 AM
So far according to all the research I have done on this topic, some have reported oily scalp in the beginning but apparently that disappears after the body has adjusted to changes.

I've been doing the modified version of this for three weeks now and I'm surprised by the lack of oil and odour.

I used to wash my hair with shampoo and conditioner everyday but now I wash my hair with conditoner and on alternate days, I use a tiny bit of shampoo.

I'm spending more time in the shower than before because I'm spending time to massage the scalp with water. During shower, the hair does feel heavier than before but when it's dry, the hair feels same as before.

I did worry about odour and oil before starting the experience but so far it hasn't been a problem for me. My hairstylist didn't even realize that I didn't wash my hair with shampoo till I mentioned it.

I know a lot of people might think no shampoo is equivalent to uncleanliness but it's not. You are actually spending more time cleaning the hair(just not with harmful chemicals)

Try it and see if you can live without shampoo. You might be pleasantly surprised. If you don't like it, you could always go back to shampoo.

hagbard
Apr 11th, 2008, 10:57 AM
I had a thread on this in the Fashion section last year. I've used nothing but water in my hair for the past year. Works great.

Topher
Apr 11th, 2008, 01:05 PM
Interesting concept. I don't know if I'm ready to try it though. I have fine hair, and keep it fairly short. On top of that, my hairline is receding, so a bottle of shampoo lasts forever anyway.

gordholio
Apr 11th, 2008, 01:45 PM
I don't know, I just use shampoo - some inexpensive, "Australian" brand in a green bottle and my hair seems fine. I'm a guy, so I don't really spend time thinking about it. I use a small amount of shampoo and no creme rinse.

eskimono
Apr 11th, 2008, 02:23 PM
I'm a guy
, so I don't really spend time thinking about it.Bravo.

Psubs
Apr 11th, 2008, 03:28 PM
I'm a guy with a ponytail. It's really thick and never use conditioner. I wash my hair every day and never brush it or blow-dry it. I do use a tiny bit of gel before tying it back. I use whatever shampoo, usually Nuetrogena. Works for me. I'm 30 and have the same hairline as I've always had. :cheesygri

MrBurns
Apr 12th, 2008, 11:52 AM
Oh pish posh..

I buy the cheapest shampoo I can find, usually comes in a jug at Wal mart for 4 bucks or so. Lasts me 3 months, I shower 80% of the days. Works fine.

1yellowdog
Apr 15th, 2008, 10:16 AM
Oh pish posh..

I buy the cheapest shampoo I can find, usually comes in a jug at Wal mart for 4 bucks or so. Lasts me 3 months, I shower 80% of the days. Works fine.


It's the point of cleaning your hair in a more natural and chemical free way, not the cost.
I saw a study done many years ago that said that shampoo was all basically the same thing with different fragrances added depending on the brand but the cheap ones worked just as well as the expensive brands. They suggested saving money on buying the cheap shampoo and buy more expensive conditioners as they were worth spending more on, the more expensive conditioners worked better than the cheaper ones.

hagbard
Apr 15th, 2008, 02:35 PM
Oh pish posh..

I buy the cheapest shampoo I can find, usually comes in a jug at Wal mart for 4 bucks or so. Lasts me 3 months, I shower 80% of the days. Works fine.

Mine's cheaper.


It's the point of cleaning your hair in a more natural and chemical free way, not the cost.
I saw a study done many years ago that said that shampoo was all basically the same thing with different fragrances added depending on the brand but the cheap ones worked just as well as the expensive brands. They suggested saving money on buying the cheap shampoo and buy more expensive conditioners as they were worth spending more on, the more expensive conditioners worked better than the cheaper ones.

Its pretty much the same stuff you'd use to clean your floors. The industry has everyone conned into thinking putting this junk on their heads every day is a good thing.

brunes
Apr 15th, 2008, 11:02 PM
So far according to all the research I have done on this topic, some have reported oily scalp in the beginning but apparently that disappears after the body has adjusted to changes.

Again, this is BS. The oiliness of your hair has to do with genetics. Some people's are oilier than others - it is just a fact of nature.

If the hair on your face, which never sees shampoo at all, is oily, then the hair on your head is going to be oily too, not matter how much "adjustment time" you give your body to get back to it's "natural balance".

granite_grrl
Apr 16th, 2008, 10:20 AM
Again, this is BS. The oiliness of your hair has to do with genetics. Some people's are oilier than others - it is just a fact of nature.

I have noticed differences in mine depending on how I treat it. Have you ever experimented? Throw out your conditioner (or start using some if you don't currently use it) for a month or two and report back.

There are some genetic issues, but you'd be surprized at how your scalp can vary in the oil it produces too.

1yellowdog
Apr 16th, 2008, 10:31 AM
Some conditioners do make your scalp oilier if you apply them there but really a conditioner is supposed to be for the hair, not applied to the scalp.

evoviii
Apr 16th, 2008, 04:22 PM
I'd love to try this method as I don't really notice much between shampoos or not. But because I use gel/hairstyling products, i'm hesitant because without it my short hair looks really frizzy or just bad.

Emancipated
Apr 17th, 2008, 08:09 AM
Interesting concept. I don't know if I'm ready to try it though. I have fine hair, and keep it fairly short. On top of that, my hairline is receding, so a bottle of shampoo lasts forever anyway.

The underlining thought here is that the shampoo may be the reason why you have a receding hair line.

I don't know if the situation is dire enough to require such drastic changes in life style. Shampoo is easy and second nature; you apply, wash and rinse. I have heard in recent years that companies are using chemicals more so than in the past but again, is it really that dire to require this? I typically shampoo once or twice a week because I have short hair and really don't have oily hair. Credit to OP though, it does sound like a more natural method.