Mature Hairlines

atliens99

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Well There is some truth to it. Like 90 percent of white men's hairlines recede a bit in the front.
 

abcdefg

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Yeah even though its still balding and its impossible to know how much farther it will ever go.
 

TheGrayMan2001

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Brick said:
is used to ease the minds of guys who are starting to go bald.

only if you're foolish enough to believe you won't go bald and simply have a "mature hairline".

mine is definitely "mature" but it's also starting to thin, hence, it doesn't stop at my "mature" hairline.
 

BulletFrost

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TheGrayMan2001 said:
Brick said:
is used to ease the minds of guys who are starting to go bald.

only if you're foolish enough to believe you won't go bald and simply have a "mature hairline".

mine is definitely "mature" but it's also starting to thin, hence, it doesn't stop at my "mature" hairline.

But that's only true for yourself. My uncles have a mature hairline and they haven't receded or thinned out anywhere in 20 years. If you have male pattern baldness you will lose more after your mature hairline sets in.
 

fodandahalf

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Brick said:
is used to ease the minds of guys who are starting to go bald.
Ridiculous. Mature hairlines, are hairlines, that have matured. It's easy to be a sourpuss if things have gone badly for you but the definition of a mature hairline is what the vast majority of men (who don't go bald) develop between the age of 17 and 30. Even if they are the result of a very slight case of male pattern baldness, then they are still very common. Example- my dad. Full head of black thick hair. Around age 20, his hairline moved up a little, maybe a norwood 2. He's kept all of it up until the age of 47 and he really doesn't seem to be losing anything now at all. Another one. My maternal grandad. Never met the guy, but pictures of him when he was very young show a mature, but strong looking hairline (slight recession at the corners, but great hair nonetheless.) He apparently kept this up until when he died, in his 60s. I have more examples, but I'm not going to bore you. Stop trying to worry everyone with really pointless and stupid posts.
 

Oknow

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stableforehead said:
Brick said:
is used to ease the minds of guys who are starting to go bald.
Ridiculous. Mature hairlines, are hairlines, that have matured. It's easy to be a sourpuss if things have gone badly for you but the definition of a mature hairline is what the vast majority of men (who don't go bald) develop between the age of 17 and 30. Even if they are the result of a very slight case of male pattern baldness, then they are still very common. Example- my dad. Full head of black thick hair. Around age 20, his hairline moved up a little, maybe a norwood 2. He's kept all of it up until the age of 47 and he really doesn't seem to be losing anything now at all. Another one. My maternal grandad. Never met the guy, but pictures of him when he was very young show a mature, but strong looking hairline (slight recession at the corners, but great hair nonetheless.) He apparently kept this up until when he died, in his 60s. I have more examples, but I'm not going to bore you. Stop trying to worry everyone with really pointless and stupid posts.

Were their hairlines V shape?
 

dontleave

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there are a million and one examples of mature hairlines that never shift further. martin clunes from men behaving badly for example, my granded is another. whatever you call it, the fact of the matter is not everyone who recedes a little goes bald. simple.
 

abcdefg

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For every example of a man where his mature hairline stays I could point out a Norwood 3 or higher where at one point he was at a mature hairline but then it kept progressing farther. There is no way in existence right now to predict how far it will go.
 

fodandahalf

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Oknow said:
stableforehead said:
Brick said:
is used to ease the minds of guys who are starting to go bald.
Ridiculous. Mature hairlines, are hairlines, that have matured. It's easy to be a sourpuss if things have gone badly for you but the definition of a mature hairline is what the vast majority of men (who don't go bald) develop between the age of 17 and 30. Even if they are the result of a very slight case of male pattern baldness, then they are still very common. Example- my dad. Full head of black thick hair. Around age 20, his hairline moved up a little, maybe a norwood 2. He's kept all of it up until the age of 47 and he really doesn't seem to be losing anything now at all. Another one. My maternal grandad. Never met the guy, but pictures of him when he was very young show a mature, but strong looking hairline (slight recession at the corners, but great hair nonetheless.) He apparently kept this up until when he died, in his 60s. I have more examples, but I'm not going to bore you. Stop trying to worry everyone with really pointless and stupid posts.

Were their hairlines V shape?

No they didn't have a widows peak kind of hairline, my dad's is just like mine except he has a smaller forehead which is annoying. My dad even came out with it the other day saying he didn't understand why he'd receded s little bit and then just never got worse.
 

fodandahalf

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Brick said:
If you're so sure it's just a mature hairline and you aren't balding then why be on this site?

I used to worry a lot more than I do now. I obviously can't be entirely sure but it just seems to be shaping up exactly like my dad's hairline who never went bald. I have also had a really high hairline from birth so I'm still hoping to do something about that.
 
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