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Something I learned during my 25 years studying women's hair loss changed everything I thought I knew about why hair gets thinner...

I was reviewing the latest research on scalp health when I noticed my office plant looking wilted. As I poured water on its waxy leaves, watching it bead up and roll off instead of absorbing...

That's when it hit me.

The breakthrough studies I'd been reading showed the same suffocating pattern was happening around hair follicles in women experiencing thinning.

Your follicles aren't dying from age or hormones like everyone thinks...

They're literally being suffocated.

 

And those expensive shampoos promising thicker hair? They might actually be making this suffocation worse.

See, your scalp is skin – delicate skin housing over 100,000 follicles that need expert care. Yet... we often wash it with ingredients that create waxy buildup, slowly choking your follicles. No wonder why so many treatments don't work.

You can't grow healthy hair in a suffocating environment.

Just like mature skin needs different care than young skin. Your changing scalp needs the same sophisticated, organic approach...

After 25 years of studying hair loss, I can confidently say that this simple '15-Second Scalp Revival Method' is one of my favorite ways to address these issues at the source.

Every day you wait, more follicles could become suffocated.Take action now!

 

Watch My Free Presentation Here Where I Talk About This Method









 

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lightless – though it was probably reluctant to fly rather than physically unable – and wrote "they weighed 12–14 pounds, so that one single bird was sufficient for three starving men." Though cormorants are normally notoriously bad-tasting, Steller says that this bird tasted delicious, particularly when it was cooked in the way of the native Kamchadals, who encased the whole bird in clay, buried it, and baked it in a heated pit. With a body mass estimated to be from 3.5 to 6.8 kg (7.7 to 15.0 lb) and a length up to around 100 cm (39 in), the spectacled cormorant was rather larger than all other known cormorants. In a similar fashion to the extant flightless cormorant, which may have rivaled it in length but not weight, the spectacled cormorant is thought to have at least largely lost the power of flight which is borne out by the reduced sternum and wing chord of museum specimens. This species was largely glossy black in color with a reported greenish gloss that may have been fairly vivid in bright light. A contrasting large white patch could be seen on its lower flanks just above the legs. Like other cormorants, they had small patches of bare skin about the face including a small gular patch and a small amount of bare skin around the eyes; these areas usually appeared to have been dull-yellow or grayish in hue, but during breeding stages, they may have changed to a bright orangey-reddish hue. During breeding stages, they also had a prominent crest on their head. The bare skin around the eyes, as well as the crest, were not present in fem