Why don't you never pull the grays you see through your hair?

How many times do you pull out a face, many more will grow overnight! We've all heard this urban legend, but how true is it? Actually, it's not a good idea to pull them out, but it's not because they're going to get a lot more out of you than they are. This theory of science is not [...]
Actually, it's not a good idea to pull them out, but it's not because they're going to get a lot more out of you than they are. This theory is based on science, and therefore there is no truth whatsoever. It's normal to lose up to 159 hairs a day, but basically they're not connected to each other in any form, so pulling a thread does not push others from the scalp.
But what if you try to remove that gray hair so that it can at least disappear for a while? The uprooted hair, which you have cut short, will stop for a while and the next cycle of growth in about three months.
In any cycle after the age of 20, the hair grows slightly thin and stays for a slightly shorter time. Circles on the head average happen every five years, and there's a limited number of them.
So by extracting the hairs of your head consciously, you may be doing yourself more harm than honor. Besides shortening their growth cycle, you cause trauma to the hair gland -- which leads to infection or even to white areas where hair no longer rises.
The nails are inevitable when we grow up, the more so if they're part of our genes, so it's just a matter of time to see them. So your new hair isn't getting out because you pulled some strings, it's just because time goes by.












