Too Much Negative Energy. Here's A Hope, Cure Thread.

Saurabhaj

Senior Member
Reaction score
1,239
Me! I do! And anyone else who stands even the slightest chance of getting them would too.

Maybe not girlfriend material but hey, I'm too old for 20 year olds as I'm near 30 but a few years ago I figured, f*** it, I'll shamelessly go for them again, it's not harming anyone.

The change I've noticed in the past handful of years is that young girls don't really care about money nowadays, it used to be that even an ugly older guy would have an easy time pulling a girl who's 19 and impressed by a nice car and he has his own place. Now they need to be attracted to him and he also needs to be "career driven", so in ways it's actually become harder to get a young girl than someone your own age, they aren't naive anymore.

Still, 20 is optimal sexual age.


About Career Driven.
This is really true.

One will be appreciated well by younger girls,while girls of that particular boy age may be impressed by someone more older and superior in experience than that person (obvious=more older means more experience in career)

Girls don't like to go for money
They just want guy with decent income to keep them happy.
 

Rudiger

Banned
My Regimen
Reaction score
6,504
What are you doing? I don't care, tell your psychiatrist is what I said, that's all.

Oh wait you have to keep them thinking you are sane.
 

N003

Experienced Member
My Regimen
Reaction score
730
Its' true, women are much more stronger then men!

I worked for 2 years in a hospital and men are much more sensitive the women.
Women are much harder in taking.

But that is normal, i call this the evolution effect.
 

That Guy

Banned
My Regimen
Reaction score
5,361
There is hope.

Every night before bed, I burn some incense and say a little prayer for this man

tsuji.jpg


You all ought to do the same.
 

nameless

Banned
Reaction score
1,091
So there's too much negative energy at this site you say.

Are you saying that we are supposed to lose our hair, become disfigured, have women abandon us, and be happy about this?
 

I.D WALKER

Senior Member
Reaction score
868
Frankly I think many of us are just too grossly interdependent (psycho-socially) on each other, that
even a rebuff by a virtual internet stranger can precipitate personal injury. I don't know whether insulating our hearts
in Teflon is a tenable solution either, when it's our poor minds that may actually require the healing?
 

Dench57

Senior Member
My Regimen
Reaction score
6,428
And I do believe they're way stronger than us, they're just better at pretending they're distressed to get sympathy.

Sympathy that they always get of course. While if you try the same strategy as a man, you'll be laughed at and told to man up.

dr-evil-crying1.gif
 

hellouser

Senior Member
My Regimen
Reaction score
2,634
There is hope.

Every night before bed, I burn some incense and say a little prayer for this man

tsuji.jpg


You all ought to do the same.

Yup. I don't pray to god anymore... I pray to Dr. Tsuji.

In Tsuji We Trust.
 

blackg

Senior Member
Reaction score
5,723
The truth "hurts", evillocks? You're a balding woman, yet you're wearing a wig and dating a (probable) 8/10 guy. A balding guy who is not at least a 7/10 is simply finished, wig or not. If your boyfriend finds out he's not gonna humiliate you like a girl would do if the situation was reversed.

Women expect love and empathy while they have none of it.

Total crap. You can not make general assumptions about what any individual would do with regard to discovering their partner wears a hair piece.

You need more life experience, Dante.
 

resu

Senior Member
Reaction score
1,353
Those results on the Bernstein site were cherry picked, it's the results you get if you respond very well to the drugs but they create false expectations if you think those are the norm.
 

Roberto_72

Moderator
Moderator
My Regimen
Reaction score
4,504
There is hope.
Every night before bed, I burn some incense and say a little prayer for this man
You all ought to do the same.
But we do
 

N003

Experienced Member
My Regimen
Reaction score
730
Today on CNN :

Drug reverses one baldness type; is male pattern next?


Unbenannt.jpg


(CNN)In his mid 40s, Mike Thomas went bald. Not a "little bald spot in the back" kind of bald or "receding hairline" kind of bald, but almost totally and completely bald. He was diagnosed with alopecia areata, an autoimmune disease, and he was devastated.

He looked, by his own description, like a "freak," with his eyebrows and eyelashes completely gone. He could feel it when people looked at him. Some of them quietly asked whether he had cancer.
"I'm in the real estate business, and I'm active in my community, but I started to shy away from people," said Thomas, who asked that his real name not be used in order to protect his privacy.
"It affects every part of your life. I got very depressed, and it was horrible," he said.
Then, this year, Thomas took a little white pill used for arthritis, and within seven months, his hair grew back.
"It's incredible. I'm so happy to have it back," he said.

What this pill means for men with more common baldness
As part of a study conducted at Stanford and Yale, Thomas and 65 other alopecia areata patients took the pill, called Xeljanz, which is prescribed for people with rheumatoid arthritis, another autoimmune disease.
More than half of the study subjects saw hair regrowth. A third recovered more than 50% of their lost hair. In a separate study, nine of 12 patients with alopecia areata recovered more than 50% of hair regrowth using a similar drug, Jakafi, which is approved for cancer treatment.
Although researchers say this is potentially great news for people with alopecia areata like Thomas, what does it mean for men who have hair loss because -- well, because they're men and they're older?
Thomas' head may help answer that question. When his hair grew back, he still had a receding hairline. That's because the Xeljanz pill gave him back his 47-year-old head of hair, not his 25-year-old head of hair.

161017121643-experimental-drugs-restore-hair-loss-split-exlarge-169.jpg


"It's incredible," Mike Thomas said of his restored hair. "I'm so happy to have it back."
So now Thomas' dermatologist, Dr. Brett King at Yale, is trying something else: rubbing an ointment containing Xeljanz on the heads of men with alopecia areata.
Will the men grow back full heads of hair, or will they be like Thomas and many of the other men in the study and grow back a head of hair with male pattern baldness?
Dermatologists are deeply divided between skepticism and optimism. King strongly suspects that the ointment won't get rid of male pattern baldness. But others are more optimistic.
Dr. Angela Christiano, a co-author of the recently published study, had success with Xeljanz when she made it into an ointment and rubbed it on the skin of mice with skin engineered to be like the skin of bald men.

The ointment was rubbed on the right side of the mice and not on the left, and the results are plain to see.
Though she thinks men might have the same success with an ointment, she said the trick is that it has to penetrate properly. Compared with the paper-thin skin of mice, human skin is "much thicker, and it's oily, and it's deep, and it's got a fat layer -- so there's a lot to think about when making a good topical formula," said Christiano, assistant professor of molecular dermatology at Columbia University Medical Center.
Why male pattern baldness is so hard to stop
Modern medicine can treat big cancerous tumors and complicated neurological diseases; it should be easy to get hair to grow, right?
"You might think you could just sprinkle something on your head like what you use to get grass to grow," said Dr. George Cotsarelis, a dermatologist at the University of Pennsylvania.
But sadly, the physiology of hair growth is much more complicated than that.
King, an assistant professor of dermatology at Yale, said that with an autoimmune disease such as alopecia areata, you're essentially trying to trick the environment surrounding the hair.
"It's like making a plant in my house think it's springtime when it's winter," he said. "You just throw a light up in the living room, and it warms things up."
But with male pattern baldness, you're dealing with a hair follicle that's pooped out. "It's like taking a brown plant that's all but dead and bringing it back to life again," he said.
And much less money is spent on solving this problem than you might imagine. "People think major pharmaceutical companies must be spending billions of dollars on this because the payoff could be so huge, but that's not the case," King said.

He said big companies are concerned that the Food and Drug Administration would approve a treatment for male pattern baldness only if it had no or few side effects, since it's treating a cosmetic problem and not a disease. Some men, however, say they suffer psychologically from losing their hair, especially if it's at a young age.
Cotsarelis, a professor at the Perelman School of Medicine, is working with relatively small companies on stem cell therapies for male pattern baldness and on tissue engineering, which involves growing hair-producing skin on a tiny scaffolding and then transplanting it back onto the scalp.
"In the end, I think there are going to be multiple ways to treat male pattern baldness, and some will work fabulously well in some people and not so well in others," Cotsarelis said.


http://edition.cnn.com/2016/10/18/health/experimental-drugs-restore-hair-loss/



 

Dench57

Senior Member
My Regimen
Reaction score
6,428
Is it 2014 again?
 

hellouser

Senior Member
My Regimen
Reaction score
2,634
Yeah, yeah the life is very hard a big b**ch :D

BUT

As an example :

Also beautiful and famous men have the big problem with the hair :
Life is not only unfair to you!!


David Beckham:

If you see him on advertising on television or magazines he looks like a man with amazing hair.

But the true is different :

He has greatly thinned hair:


david-beckham-shirtless-beach-07.jpg

Awe, poor guy... and we all thought he was so privileged...
 

Agustin Araujo

Moderator
Moderator
My Regimen
Reaction score
332
I am so tired of hair being just being too easy to grow anywhere on anything with any other type of condition except on scalps suffering from baldness.
 
Top