satsminded on Nostr: On long hair: Quote-- Your natural hair color shows your melanin status. The ...
On long hair:
Quote--
Your natural hair color shows your melanin status.
The pigmentation information in skin and hair tells us a lot about each other—not just about our race and ancestry, but also our health.
Our hair, far from being “dead matter,” as I remember being taught, is actually an active part of our body’s tanning/melanation processes.
Hair keeps a record of your melanin status over time, and has the ability to send melanin back into your body when it needs it.
Thus, hair color is not just pretty, but a storage center for valuable melanin.
In this context, is shaving potentially removing a supply of energy and stored minerals (including copper and iron) from your body?
I’m thinking especially of the obsession with shaving darkest, most melanin-rich hair such as in the armpits (which serve the lymph and breast tissues), the groin (which serve the reproductive organs), and the eyebrows (which serve the eye, one of the most energy-intensive organs in the body).
From https://substack.com/@nikkokennedy?r=1dkc2&utm_medium=ios&utm_source=profile
Quote--
Your natural hair color shows your melanin status.
The pigmentation information in skin and hair tells us a lot about each other—not just about our race and ancestry, but also our health.
Our hair, far from being “dead matter,” as I remember being taught, is actually an active part of our body’s tanning/melanation processes.
Hair keeps a record of your melanin status over time, and has the ability to send melanin back into your body when it needs it.
Thus, hair color is not just pretty, but a storage center for valuable melanin.
In this context, is shaving potentially removing a supply of energy and stored minerals (including copper and iron) from your body?
I’m thinking especially of the obsession with shaving darkest, most melanin-rich hair such as in the armpits (which serve the lymph and breast tissues), the groin (which serve the reproductive organs), and the eyebrows (which serve the eye, one of the most energy-intensive organs in the body).
From https://substack.com/@nikkokennedy?r=1dkc2&utm_medium=ios&utm_source=profile
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