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(Reactions Splash Intro)
Tiffany: Are we boring you with all this hair talk, Jon?
Jon: We’ll that’s mildly sexist, and no.
Y’all can talk about hair all you want, I’m just upset
because we’re at this 1920s party and none of you are
in the correct decade.
Megan: Look at you, you didn’t even dress up.
We’d at least put forth some effort.
She looks like she came right out of Ridgemont High.
Jon: C’mon, you know I’m lazy.
This is something that you guys know.
I don’t even wash my hair.
Tiffany: Oh… Don’t tell me you’re doin’ that no poo thing.
Jon: Yeah, I am.
Smell’s good, smell it.
Tiffany: Oh no. No we’re good thank you.
Jon: It smells fine.
I do co-washing.
Megan: What’s co-washing?
{Text title onscreen: What Happens if You Stop Using Shampoo? }
Co-washing is just using conditioner, without shampoo,
to wash your hair.
It’s part of the “no poo” craze, which is
short for “no shampoo.”
People have started doing this because they’ve read that
shampoo and conditioner are damaging to your hair.
There’s some merit to this constantly washing and
conditioning your hair with water stretches the cuticles
of your hair strands.
These cuticles generally lie flat, but every time they get
wet, they can dry in less-than-
flat formations, making your
hair look dull and more easily break.
Dull, breaking hair = generally not good.
Trina: You have all that oily
sebum and pollen and dirt and
pollution and random stuff in
your hair, so be prepared for
that smelly, greasy, mess.
Some people claim sebum stops being secreted after a few
weeks, because your hair has plenty now.
That’s not true, it’s produced from the root, which has no
idea how icky the rest of your hair has gotten.
Going “no poo” anyway?
Consider using a mix of dry starches or clay
to mop up that messy noggin.
A less extreme version of this movement
is called “co-washing,” short for
Washing you hair with Conditioner.
A popular brand for this craze
is Wen, but there are cheaper alternatives.
People following this regimen skip the shampoo step and
just use rinse-out conditioners.
Trina: Does it work?
Sort of.
Conditioners have some of the
ingredients that actually clean
your hair, but not as many as shampoos, so they
won’t dry our hair out as much.
They also have slippery silicones that help combs and brushes
glide through your hair easier,
that’s why conditioners help detangle.
So sure, go ahead, don’t wash your hair.
Or just use conditioner.
That’s up to you.
It’s probably less damaging in the
long run, but it also smells bad.
And hair strands are actually dead, so if you “damage” your
current hair, the new stuff growing out of your head
starts with a healthy, clean slate either way.
What you SHOULD NOT DO is try
weird gimmicks or home remedies
without researching first.
You shouldn’t use baking soda
and vinegar to clean your hair, for example.
It’s an old wives tale and it’s
actually bad for your hair.
Vinegar has a low pH, meaning
it’s quite acidic and putting
acid in wet hair is very damaging to your cuticles.
And there’s really no benefit.
Shampooing your hair can dry
it out, but it’s not nearly as
bad for your hair as dyeing, relaxing, or doing other
chemical or heat treatments to your hair.
The fancy claims on shampoo
bottles may not work for you, but one thing’s for sure:
it’ll help your hair look, feel, and smell cleaner.
And that’s a win for all of us.
We want to give a huge thank you to YouTube for
helping make this video possible.
Big thank you(s) to Lex Flemming
from Made Yew Look and Trina
Espinoza who is Ms Beautyphile.
Be sure to check out both of
their awesome YouTube channels.
Seriously, you’ll thank us.
Thanks for watching.