Hello!
I was hanging out on Twitter in the middle of
the night recently when I saw a link to an article about reverse
shampooing and clicked on it out of curiosity. It took me to this
XOJane article about it. My first thoughts: Whaddafug is reverse shampooing?!
My
hair had been in a funk for a while when I saw the article mentioned
above. For the previous few weeks before using this method my hair
looked almost as greasy after washing as it did before. Hubby would say
'Have you washed your hair? It looks really greasy!' and I'd be like
'Ugh, yessss!' and he'd look at me in that
I'm-married-to-a-woman-with-Fibromyalgia way and say 'Are you
sure?!'
And because I'm a lazy ho-baggage I'd waft around the smelly, damp
towel I cast off my noggin just a couple of hours hence to prove it
(and to stop him from putting me in a home.)
I'm
always careful to only condition the parts of my hair from the nape of
my neck down to the ends (as recommended by a hairdresser) and I even
tried changing up my shampoo and conditioner but my hair looked dull and
greasy whatever I did.
The first time I tried it it felt so
wrong
to be putting conditioner on top of my greasy hair, but I conditioned,
threw a towel on my head then cleaned my teeth (I have a two minute
timer on my toothbrush) then rinsed the conditioner off before
shampooing.
At first, my hair hung together in wet
clumps and I thought 'This is obviously not going to work.' But as it
dried, some magic started to happen. My hair was softer and shinier than
it had been for weeks, and it was full of extra body which only
impossibly hair-endowed Satanic witches sport in shampoo adverts, which I
thought was the result of blowing the guy with the red horns. I was a
convert. (To the reverse shampooing, not blowing Beelzebub.) Not only
did my hair look great, but instead of washing my hair every 2 days, I
can now wash it every 3, which means my henna colour will last longer
each time.
There are no before photos of my hair because I didn't expect it to work at
all so hadn't prepared a lank and revolting before photo. But I can wholeheartedly recommend this method if you have
fine hair
which is in need of a bit of oomph, or if you struggle not to
accidentally over condition. If your hair is thick or dry, it's probably
best to stick to what you already know.
I woke up with this bouffant going on the other day.
Let me know if you're going to give it a go!
Thanks for reading.