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Published 03.10.2008 | Permanent Link | Comments (12)
Hi Amy,
Usually I'm pretty good at figuring out what my body needs--what my skin can handle, what kind of shampoo to buy, etc. After all, I've had it forever, right? But disaster has recently struck. In the last three weeks, my hair has gone crazy and it simply WON'T get clean. It's not glamorous anyway, as I don't have it colored or style it beyond blow-drying, but this is just grotesque. Please brace yourself for when you open the pictures.
Here are the basics of my head: every hairdresser has told me I have "very thin hair but a lot of it." I shampoo the top and condition the bottom every morning (like you, I have to do everyday and I'll never be able to do otherwise), then blow it dry. For the past few months I've been using Sunsilk Anti-Flat, followed by their Volumizing Creme at my roots before drying. For being so cheap, it was actually a great shampoo for me, but suddenly it got bad in the back. It would feel greasy and stringy like I was missing whole pieces of my head, especially underneath in the back, like the shampoo wasn't getting there. Time for a switch, I told myself, and maybe even a professional shampoo! The hairdresser uses Bumble and bumble Thickening Shampoo and Conditioner on me, plus she recommended their Sunday Shampoo for once a week to get rid of all the products and have a fresh start. So, I gave the Sunday a go, and that day was a little flimsy and not so nice to touch, but I figured it would get better.
No. It has worsened. From the crown of my head and back, it is all just one nasty, unmanageable, unclean mess. I gave B&b a few more days with varying amounts of shampoo--from a quarter-sized dollop to the tip of my pinky, but it's not happening. I tried switching back to Sunsilk, and it's not happening. I tried using the Sunday as an everyday, and while that was the tiniest bit better, it was not enough. I've tried rinsing my hair out way longer than usual just to make sure I got every last drop, drying it with cold air rather than hot, letting it air dry, and no matter what, the back of my head is in the condition it would be if I had spent all this time just not washing my hair.
Nothing has changed in my life: same diet, same environment, same miserable weather. Is this just my usual gross morning hair and I'm not using enough to clean it, or is this build up that I'm not rinsing out enough? But I've been concentrating on distributing everything evenly, and it's still only the back of my head. With a salon appointment a ghastly two weeks away, Amalah, please: What is going on with my head?
-Molly
Okay, I have so much to say about this subject. Please hold while I try to figure out what to say first.
Fine! I will open with a confession. I HAD THE SAME PROBLEM ONCE. For weeks, I couldn't figure out what was going on. I would shampoo and rinse and rinse and rinse and then when I went to blowdry my hair it looked like I had missed a huge chunk of hair in the back of my head. Oily, stringy, dirty. I blamed my layered haircut, I blamed my shampoo, I blamed the crappy city water pressure and the crappy city water.
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Turns out there were a few things to blame, although the primary culprit was my own shampooing technique. I was rubbing and lathering and rinsing, but I was not SCRUBBING.
I think those of us with oily hair develop a bit of a complex when it comes to touching our hair and roots. And understandably so -- you know what happens if you spend too much time flipping your hair around during the day. But it's different in the shower. You really need to get in there. Think about the kind of washing you get at the salon -- a nice deep scalp massage with maximum fingertip pressure. THAT'S how oily roots and scalps get clean. Exfoliate the dead skin cells away and work your shampoo (a nickel-sized amount for you, I'd say) into a furious lather.
Rinsing the shampoo out IS important, but what I'm seeing in your hair is most likely NOT shampoo residue. I'm seeing styling products and general everyday oil crap, which means rinsing is not the big problem here. (I'd try upgrading that volumizing cream, by the way. A light spray mousse might be better.) I just don't think you're really scrubbing the hair clean in the first place. And oil begets more oil, so I'm thinking your hair (like mine) has just hit the wall and had enough with being only sort-of cleaned each day.
(And don't worry, unlike soooo many oily-hair advice columns and how-to's, I won't bother with the, "your scalp is overcompensating! try shampooing every other day!" thing. I know. I KNOW that doesn't work for hair like ours. I've tried it. If anything, you might want to shampoo twice a day -- I think "rinse and repeat" is a better tactic for our hair than anything else.)
When you rinse, try to separate your hair into horizontal layers (using the end of a rat-tail comb helps if your hair is prone to tangling and clumping when wet) and aim the water right in between the layer. A handheld shower attachment inches away is awesome, if you've got one, but using a cup to aid in rinsing is pretty good too.)
Now, all of this is not to say that technique is everything and your choice of shampoo is nothing. It obviously matters, and you know what? I kind of hate Bumble & Bumble shampoos. Even though every stylist I've gone to loves and recommends them. I never thought they were right for my hair. They're just very heavy and conditioner-like. So if you've got thick hair that drinks up moisture by the bucketloads, B&B is great. But fine, oily hair like ours needs that perfect shampoo blend of nourishing and deep-cleaning, but ultimately needs to be very, very light and free of additives and fragrances. So I'm not really surprised that the B&B stuff didn't help.
In looking at the SunSilk shampoo varieties, I'm not seeing one that is jumps out as the right choice for you. A clarifying shampoo would be good, but I also don't want to solve the oil problem at the expense of your volume problem. I am about 75% sure I solved my own Phase of Ick by switching to Pureology's Volumizing Shampoo and scrubbing the bejezus out of my head. Fewer additives, lovely lather, extremely clean-rinsing. The stuff is awesome for the health of your hair, but doesn't have that heavy conditioner-like quality of the B&B. Conditioner only belongs on your ends, as you know, so...yeah.
Regular readers (I think we have a couple of those?) may remember that I put my foot down after Pureology's latest price increase and now use Wella's Volumizing Shampoo instead. I think it may be even lighter than the Pureology, so if you don't want to spend that much money, go for the Wella.
Now, both the Wella and the Pureology are technically for colored hair, which brings me to my final bit of advice. If you've ever thought about getting some highlights, now might be the time. If your hair has truly hit some kind of hormonal or age-related chemical wall and the extra oil persists no matter what shampoo you use or how much you scrub, adding haircolor is a very real and very viable solution. My own fight with the oil? Came during a period where I stopped coloring my hair. I went back to my natural dirty blonde color and decided to let the sun give me some natural highlights. And then when the weather changed and there was no more sun, I went back to highlights and ta-da! I have NEVER had a problem with oil to that degree since.
So. Since I was not lying about having a lot to say about this topic, I will recap:
Step One: Improve your shampoo technique. Give equal focus and energy to scrubbing your roots and scalp as rinsing the shampoo out. Massage your scalp as hard as you can and rinse in small sections.
Step Two: Thick, goopy shampoos are not your friend. Ditch the B&B and try Pureology or Wella. If you think Step One is part of the problem, keep on with the SunSilk and consider adding one of the other two for every-other-day use. Hair like ours does seem to suffer from product fatigue and switching shampoos does help.
Step Three: Entirely up to you, but consider some highlights. (Just make sure your stylist applies highlights top to bottom and not just on the top layer of your hair.) Highlights slow down the oil production without significantly damaging thin hair (provided you care for them with a top-shelf shampoo, obviously).
Related Posts:
- Wella Color Preserve Shampoo
- Drugstore vs. Salon Shampoos
- Because It Pays to be a Shampoo Snob
SubscribeAmalah is a pseudonym of Amy Corbett Storch. A Washington D.C.-based freelance writer. The Smackdown is published on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. You can follow Amy's daily mothering adventures at www.amalah.com. Also, it's pronounced AIM-ah-lah.
If you would like to submit a question, email Amalah at here.
Comments (12):
Cassandra said:
I had the same problem when I really started using product (particularly volumizing products). I could not get my hair clean, for the life of me. I worked at an Ulta at the time, and finally sucked it up and asked the salon manager what was up.
She was snippy, and told me OBVIOUSLY my hair wasn't clean enough, because I'm totally breaking a rule and not shampooing twice. EVERYONE knows you ALWAYS shampoo twice. That's why the shampoo bottles are bigger. Duh.
While I'd never heard this, and almost didn't try it because she was such a bitch (I'll just keep my dirty hair! Take that!) it really helped.
Also, parting my hair during the second shampoo and working it in like crazy, like Amalah suggested, made it work even better.
Posted on March 10, 2008 10:34
appelsauce said:
Although I don't share this hair type, I can still relate to the problem. I don't know what it is about that spot at the back of my head (maybe it's the spot getting matted down the most while I sleep?), but it's always been stubborn about getting clean. What seems to help in my case is to start at the back of my head when shampooing, then using a lathering/massaging technique like Amalah suggested. The lather is more than enough to spread to the rest of my scalp, and by starting at the problem area, I make sure that the gunk back there gets the full power of my shampoo.
Posted on March 10, 2008 10:41
Alison said:
I won't argue that this is about technique more than shampoo choice, but if you want to try a shampoo that will get you ridiculously clean: Lush's Big shampoo gets you pretty much as clean as possible. It has salt in it. It's insane and awesome and I love it. If you don't have a Lush store near you, check out lush dot com.
Posted on March 10, 2008 11:05
mollyawesome said:
You. Are. Amazing. Not only am I wicked excited that you chose MY question, but this helps tons. You're right, I definitely don't scrub enough, I've always been afraid I'd rip my hair out or something. I had my salon appointment last week and mentioned it to them, and since it's B&B Central there, they were all in denial and were sure it was my water pressure, but it just ain't happening. Fortunately, I DID pluck up the courage to ask about highlights that would look natural and not streaky, and she highly recommended it. With her and your opinions combined, I am convinced: I will get highlights!
Thanks Amalah!
Posted on March 10, 2008 11:21
Nicole said:
Ohhhh, thank you for this post. I get greasy only on the top of my head from certain shampoos (and dry everywhere else). I usually solve the problem by scrubbing the holy hell out of that patch o' greasiness for about a week, and never touching that shampoo again (Pantene is the culprit. And Garnier Fructis. And any other drugstore brand, it seems. Except Dove.) I'll usually steal some of Darren's Neutrogena clarifying for the mega scrub.
The best shampoo I found was Kiehl's - its nice, light, foams well and you don't need a lot of it. It is, of course, quite expensive, especially north of the 49th parallel. And its not animal tested - shiny, happy bonus :)
Posted on March 10, 2008 11:55
Andrea said:
As an emergency tactic, you also might want to try putting about a tablespoon of baking soda into a giant cup of warm water and rinsing your hair with that after you've shampooed. You can feel the grease slide right out of your hair. It's dynamic.
Posted on March 10, 2008 12:06
LGraves65 said:
I agree with Angela. But I always add the baking soda to my first shampoo -- just dump half a handful or so on top of your shampoo, make a paste, and wash away. Then wash again with just shampoo. Result: Clean, shiny, non-greasy hair!
Posted on March 10, 2008 14:28
LGraves65 said:
Andrea, not Angela. D'oh!
Posted on March 10, 2008 14:29
Chataine said:
Aha! I had this problem a few weeks ago and yeah, just had to switch shampoo (no more thick moisturizing goopiness) AND start really scrubbing the hell out of the back of my head. (That sentence reads weirdly. Hmmm.) I am so glad it wasn't just me! I hated feeling like a greasebucket all the time.
Posted on March 10, 2008 16:47
Gamma said:
I always have to brush my hair really thoroughly right before showering. And I mean right before, the tiny micro tangles that my hair gets in two minutes just kill trying to get it clean.
Oh, and my current shampoo, which I love, is Malibu Swim & Sport. Unfortunately you can only find it at swim stores.
Posted on March 10, 2008 19:03
Alice_R said:
I agree with the baking soda tip. Once I started mixing some in with my regular shampoo, my greasy problem pretty much disappeared (and I have exactly the same type of hair as you guys). I also take the time to ensure that I give my scalp a really good scrub and cover my entire head with lather (not including the ends of my hair).
My greasiness issues also got worse when I stopped coloring my hair (chemically, anyway - I use henna now and love it) - but I won't go back to dye, so baking soda and scrubbing it is!
Posted on March 11, 2008 16:31
Mindy said:
When you give your scalp a good massage, make sure your fingernails are not involved. They can do a lot of damage to a wet scalp. Just my two cents worth.
Posted on March 11, 2008 21:13