Prescriptions or miracle cures that actually work? Affordable hair transplants? Maybe I can't except much as I'm over 40...
When I was 14, my mom pulled back my hair line and asked my dysfunctional father if I was going bald. Talk about a "What the fuck are you doing" moment.
At 17, I was getting depressed about being bald. I would look in the mirror trying to see how much it changed. At 21, I said fuck it. I'm a sexy beast, see me shine!
I went through phases during my hair loss.
1. Keeping my hair wet to hide the fact it's thinning 2. Trimming it down, combing it forward and swirling the back so make it look "tight" 3. Trimming it very low and looking like a boss 4. Shaving it down to the skin and having people ask me why I don't grow my hair out
Here's how I coped with it. I was honest with myself.
Sure I would like to have hair, but I'm not Elon Musk. Did it impact my success with women? Yes, I think I get more women being bald. Why? I don't know honestly. Am I built like Jason Statham? More like a lean James Corden.
To make my situation, I'm a hairy man; pale (programmer) and I have a belly. I'm also seriously hairy... The only places I don't have hair is on my head, forehead, and palms; ironic right? Not on my palms? Wait until this shit turns gray... I'm going to look like a fucking Yeti.
Find your true source of confidence. It's not your hair, income, or job. It's the confidence you have in your ability to change.
I know you like having hair, but it's not what defines you. Plus, you're over 40 and thinning out. Congrats you lucky bastard :)
I hope you mentally get past your fears and concerns. Be honest with yourself buddy.
But I did some more research and found some early studies on PubMed that suggest that topical finasteride works just as well without the negative side effects.
The only company I could find selling topical finasteride is from ForHims. I’ve been using the spray for about 3 months and my hair is definitely thicker now, but it hasn’t helped with my hairline yet.
I’m not a doctor, so you should definitely do your own research or better yet, talk to a doctor. I don’t work for Hims, but I’ve just been impressed by their products. Definitely cheaper than hair transplant surgery.
Anyways, if this is an emotional thing for you, the big three.
1. Propecia
2. Rogaine
3. Transplants (since you seem to have hair and are over 40).
Some things facts that may help assuage your discomfort:
1. Male weaves are becoming all the rage. Could be worth a shot.
2. I'm sorry you don't have a beautiful bald head, but the good news is- you're a guy! We aren't expected nor do we need to be beautiful to be successful in life and love. Just go out to dinner at a nice restaurant and you'll likely come across one or more ugly oafish looking men with a vastly more attractive or even extremely hot companion by his side. Character + ability to provide a good life > looks.
3. Self-assurance and self-confidence are sourced from within. Not from hair fibers.
Anyway, I wanted to say something more practical. I once saw a guy who's hair formed what looked like a thick "handle" straight across the front. Otherwise he was completely bald on top, and pretty much all the way back, George Costanza style. He regularly shaved that bar of hair off, but as it always grows back, you can see the pattern of plugs, which looks far worse than natural balding ever would.
Ends up he started with hair transplants to cover widow's peaks and "lower his forehead." It was fine for a few years, but later in life, most of the hair behind it receded away from the transplant areas, and he was unable to afford chasing after the continually receding hairline. So he resigned himself to having a really wonky looking hairdo for the rest of his life.
Keep that in mind, whatever solution you choose. Your current response needs to keep the future state of coif in mind.
First, it should go without saying, but I'm not a doctor. I'm just a random internet stranger offering pointers. Consider that anything I say may be wrong. Do your own research, and talk with a real doctor.
That being said, there's minoxidil[1], although it doesn't require a prescription. The original commercial name is Rogaine. It's a foam you apply twice a day. As I've heard, you'd lose all your hair in the first 6 months, and then it would regrow fuller. You'd have to apply it for life. If you stop, then you would go back to the amount of hair you had before taking it.
You may evaluate differently, but personally I don't think it's worth it. It's not a trivial expense, not easily available worldwide, and seems too bothersome.
Another medication is finasteride-1mg[2], many times sold under the brand names Propecia/Proscar. It's a pill taken daily. AFAIK, it only works to prevent further baldness and not to restore hair that's already been lost. It may or may not require a prescription depending on where you are, but you should check with a doctor to see if they think it'll work for you. Not all forms of baldness are the same. The 1mg version can be expensive, so I hear some people buy the much cheaper 5mg version and cut that in quarters for 1.25mg doses. A potential side-effect is possibly irreversible ED. You should evaluate on your own if the risk is low enough to be disregarded.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minoxidil#Hair_growth
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finasteride#Scalp_hair_loss
If you go with topical treatments like Midoxinil, have low expectations. There is evidence that they "work," but they're not magic-- at best you'll hide the extent of loss with short-lived new growth (forget having a ponytail). You must maintain daily usage to even get that much. Retail price is ridiculous but Costco sells it cheap.
Latisse (specifically, not some lookalike "serum") will make hair grow on literally anything, but it's a bit expensive to use on your scalp. Typically meant for eyelash lengthening and might require a prescription. But hey, if you're desperate...
Exercising outdoors more, to become less "pale and pudgy", is good for your health, even if for some reason it fails to make you less pale and pudgy. Being outdoors, and exercising, also both improve one's mental health in a way that baldness "cures" will not.
Speaking as a pale balding dude, I get what you're saying, but chasing baldness cures is unlikely to help. Trying to do something about "pale and pudgy" is more likely to work, and also likely to have side-benefits as well even if it doesn't work.
But outside of that getting in shape is for sure a big task, but it's something that can really aid in confidence. Once you see some results its addicting imo.
Just my 2 cents. Hope you have a great week.
The only "solutions" you consider are wearing a hair system (toupee of real hair), drugs (finasteride, minoxidyl, plus hair transplant if you want), or a care-free attitude. I personally go through phases of caring and not. Life's just better when I don't worry about it.
4 out of 5 white guys are going bald. Finasteride can help but some have side effects.
It's cliche advice but it works. Start strength training, walking, and diet off some of the weight.
Infrared laser diode caps stimulate cell activity (both growth and graying--use with lots of antioxidants and pause if graying begins to increase)
[1] - https://www.youtube.com/c/DrEricBergDC/search?query=alopecia
I was devastated. I really felt like I didn’t have a future anymore. I’d never thought of myself as being unusually attractive, but I was horrified at the thought of being unattractive. I became deeply depressed. It really was a period of darkness for me.
There is no such thing as a miracle cure—yet—but you have options. It’s been twenty years since I first realized I was losing my hair, but I still appear to have a full head of hair. I’m doing the following:
- Propecia (or generic Finasteride). That’s probably the most effective thing on the market right now. Might require a prescription where you are, and absolutely talk to your doctor before doing this. Side effects can include erectile dysfunction, and I’ve seen some people on forums talk about “brain fog”. I think it may have impacted my libido in the beginning, but I’m nervous, chronically single, and sexually inexperienced (hey, this is my throwaway account) so I honestly can’t tell if it really did anything. (To be clear, my lack of romantic success is not related to my hair, I’m just deeply introverted and awkward.)
- Toppik. After you try it, you won’t leave home without it. Toppik is a powder made of microfibers that stick to your hair and make it look fuller. Obviously if you’re completely bald, it won’t work, but you can be noticeably thinning and Toppik will hide that completely. (I’m not affiliated at all with the company, but I’ve been using this for two decades and it works.)
- I use Nizoral shampoo. A lot of people on forums say it helps. Can’t swear to it, but it does reduce dandruff.
- I wouldn’t be thinking about hair transplants just yet. If you are, research the *hell* out of this. There are way too many bad doctors out there. From what I’ve read, you want to avoid the Follicular Unit Transplant technique; that’s where they harvest a strip, which leaves a scar. The approach I (briefly) considered was Follicular Unit Excision (FUE), since there was less chance of scarring, but it’s been a little while since I researched this. Don’t rush into anything; if you’re not Picard-level bald yet, you likely have better options.
Also:
- I’ve realized that women really do seem less concerned with appearance than I would have thought, especially as you/they get older. I know a number of women I find attractive are with guys who are partly or completely bald. Comments like “find a hobby and just be confident”, as glib as they are, have a grain of truth to them; if you’re a decent person, have stuff you care about, and are articulate enough to make it sound interesting, your appearance might not be as much of an issue as you think it will.
- While I’m hardly an authority on fashion, the following have never failed me: dark jeans, Chuck Taylor high-tops, and an illustrated T-shirt from someplace like threadless.com. Hipster? It sure is. But at least in my experience, an ironic Star Wars illustration makes you look more interesting than something you’d wear to the gym (although I’m a web dev/designer; if you’re a banker, that might not be a good aesthetic). Yes, you can still wear this when you’re over 40.
- In short: fix the stuff you can fix. Dressing better, keeping up your appearance, and doing interesting stuff (hiking, having an online art portfolio, exploring abandoned places, etc) goes a long, long way.
- Finally, I’d say don’t lose hope. I really do believe that hair multiplication techniques and improved topical treatments are pretty close. They’ll be expensive, but I don’t think baldness is inevitable for people our age.