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Headaches with hair growth
by
BaldBassMan
on 16 Sep, 2023 20:33
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Hey guys, been a long time since I've been here, but wanted to check in and see if I'm alone in this boat. Been shaving my head about 10 years or so now, and I've noticed when I get lazy and don't shave for a week or so, I'm more prone to getting a headache. Now, I will say that I've had chronic headaches and migraines for the past 20ish years, but they seem to be more frequent and more severe when I'm unshaven. Been battling them the past few days, thought work had me stressed out, then today I finally shaved, and the headache was all but gone by the time I was done shaving. It's something I've recognized for a while now, but today's events seem to solidify my curiosity that much more. Anybody else have this happen or receive and explanation as to why it happens?
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#1
by
Tyler
on 16 Sep, 2023 23:21
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I've never heard of that happening, but I'm also curious to see if other guys here have experienced that or heard of it.
So it happens about a week after shaving? Do you wear a hat when you don't shave?
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#2
by
reddog
on 17 Sep, 2023 05:44
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I haven't had that problem. I notice alot of itchiness after a few days of not shaving.
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#3
by
slybeard
on 18 Sep, 2023 06:54
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I always got headaches when wearing a hat or sometimes even with sun shades. Seems like anything that put the slightest pressure on my head caused them. Since going sly, I have not let the hair grow back that much, but I suspect that if I did, the new sensation of the hair may cause headaches as well.
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#4
by
BaldBassMan
on 18 Sep, 2023 08:51
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I've never heard of that happening, but I'm also curious to see if other guys here have experienced that or heard of it.
So it happens about a week after shaving? Do you wear a hat when you don't shave?
Roughly a week, yeah. I'll wear hats occasionally, mainly when outside doing yard work or with the kids, but I'd say it's less than 10% of the time.
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#5
by
JohnRa
on 19 Sep, 2023 05:14
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Hi. Could it be that your body knows that it's going into headache mode which results in you being lazy and not shaving? Are you a sufferer of cluster headaches? Those show up frequently and are often classified as worse than migraines, then they suddenly disappear for awhile and come back just as suddenly.
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#6
by
BaldBassMan
on 19 Sep, 2023 05:49
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Hi. Could it be that your body knows that it's going into headache mode which results in you being lazy and not shaving? Are you a sufferer of cluster headaches? Those show up frequently and are often classified as worse than migraines, then they suddenly disappear for awhile and come back just as suddenly.
No, not likely. The thing is, I've had chronic headaches and migraines for over 20 years now, so I never really leave "headache mode" so to speak. As far as cluster headaches go, not that I've ever noticed or been diagnosed. Headaches for me are simply a part of life, just as they were for my father and now it seems my son too. In the past 20 years the longest I've gone without a headache or some kind is probably less than a month, some being more severe than others of course.
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#7
by
Semi-Sly
on 20 Sep, 2023 11:39
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Well regardless of what is causing your headaches if you find a keeping your head shaved gives you some relief but it doesn’t seem to me that there’s even a question about it you should keep your head shaved!
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#8
by
clint902
on 27 Nov, 2023 07:27
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we have a lot of nerves in our heads so could be pulling. I've hear of women that wear wigs getting headaches so my advice is to keep shaving, if not, the headaches will go away at some point.
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#9
by
Semi-Sly
on 27 Nov, 2023 10:13
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Well there are a lot of nerves in our scalp and associated areas of skin that contribute to headaches.
I have suffered from headaches for years and people suggested that I get a daith piercing in one or both of my ears and that it can help I thought they were crazy but I did it and they were right! It seems to work along the same principle as acupressure. I still get headaches but not nearly as often and not nearly as severe.