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The body is incredibly complex. This may not be the cause, but I thought I'd bring it to your attention. Everyone is different; from diverse backgrounds and genetics which can play a part. Science is not always settled.

My first gray happened a month after I met my husband...so I've always blamed it on him.:gig :wee
I say, fair enough, that's the only thing that had recently changed in your life!
I suspect that you would be surprised how fast the white hairs stop once the excess hydrogen peroxide production stops. This was information discovered by accident when the by product of people who had white hair started taking a certain pill and their hair returned to its natural color as it continued to grow out.
Do say. What is the pill, for those of us that wonder?
 
I'm liking the grey hair, it makes people younger than me to respect me more. Maybe it has a bit to do with how I was raised in that we were taught to respect and give honor to the older folk. I actually appreciate the teaching now that I'm "older".

Personally I like when people let their hair be a natural color, they are being themselves naturally. Coloring their hair seems to insinuate lack of contentment with themselves. I find it un-natural and unattractive when a face is obviously in the older class and they have solid colored hair. (my opinion only)
My hair is naturally purple. And pink. And green. Also, red.
 
Yes, but oxidative stress is involved in hyperinsulinemia/insulin resistance. Osteoporosis can be linked/implicated with diabetes. The precursor to type 2 diabetes is usually hyperinsulinemia/insulin resistance. View attachment 2969784

Some of my hairs have/are turning back to dark at the base. There's not enough time to turn them all back tho. :p:gig I've been white since about 40ish I think. :confused:

My grandmother has osteoporosis. She never developed diabetes, but I suspect she had hyperinsulinemia. All the ladies on my maternal side get cancer, but not the same cancers. I'm going out on a limb to say I strongly suspect the damage from hyperinsulinemia/insulin resistance is suspect, doing damage to other parts involved with hormone production and such.
You know it’s funny you mention your hair changing back because I actually just recently read an article that said that that was possible in some people. I think mostly in cases where it’s stress based but even then, only certain people. Guess you’re one of the lucky ones :lau
 
I suspect that you would be surprised how fast the white hairs stop once the excess hydrogen peroxide production stops. This was information discovered by accident when the by product of people who had white hair started taking a certain pill and their hair returned to its natural color as it continued to grow out.
How do you know if you have the excess peroxide thing?
 
Do say. What is the pill, for those of us that wonder?
This isn't the article that made me aware of the H2O2 situation but it contains much of the same information.

"In a 2009 study, researchers discovered that going gray is simply a buildup of hydrogen peroxide in your hair particles, which bleaches your hair from the inside.[2] Yep, bottle blondes love hydrogen peroxide for its bleaching effect, but it’s also a chemical that your hair cells make naturally.


Here’s where things get interesting — usually, a hardworking enzyme called catalase breaks down hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen. But as you get older, catalase production starts to slow down. The result? Hydrogen peroxide starts to accumulate in the body.


“Hydrogen peroxide plays a major role in essentially bleaching out the hair pigment centers,” says Ronald Peralta, cancer survivor and co-founder of hair supplement Nutrafol, in a recent Bulletproof Radio (iTunes) podcast episode. “Gray hair is nothing less than a reflection of a reduction of catalase enzyme, one of the more potent antioxidants.”


Catalase isn’t the only enzyme that breaks down hydrogen peroxide. Glutathione peroxidase, the body’s master antioxidant produced by the liver, turns hydrogen peroxide into water.[3] Because glutathione production lowers as you get older, it’s a good idea to supplement. To get more glutathione:"

https://daveasprey.com/gray-hair-science-natural-solutions/
 
I found my first grey hair 6 days after I turned 21. I pulled it out and taped it to my bathroom mirror. It grew back. I pulled it out again. It didn't grow back. I stopped pulling out grey hairs.

I was very glad to see it was the sparkly, white-grey like my maternal grandmother had. I thought she had beautiful hair. If all of mine goes that way, I'm fine with that. I've never dyed my hair, and if I ever do, it'll be to dye it purple.

My mom got the steel grey hair. She dyed it, well, "covered it," as they used to say. I asked her if she stopped dying it, would it be all grey, and she said she thought so. I'm nearly as old as she lived to be, and my hair is probably 40% grey, mostly underneath, so it doesn't show as much as is there.
 
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