Being Bald And Learning To Handle It
Written by Stuart Stevens | Thursday, 13 April 2006 | There are 0 comments
People go to great lengths to stop going bald, for example Zach Lund a famous skeleton slider has recently been banned from competing in his chosen sport in the Olympic Games due to his use of a hair loss drug called finasteride, commonly known as Propecia.
Many people believe that he knew the risk that he was taking by using the Propecia and decided to continue using it anyway regardless of the consequences. They say he was prepared to put his hair restoration before his Olympic and sporting career. Mr Lund said that the medicine Propecia stopped his hair falling out and made him feel better about himself and gave him more confidence in all walks of life.
Propecia was launched in America in 1998 and is thought to be the best treatment for hair resoration available on the market today. In fact estimates say that over a million men have taken Propecia and the results can be impressive.
People have different attitudes to baldness and some say that your attitude to your baldness is the most important. Some men have a good confidence level not to care about their balding heads and keep their hair very short and don't try to cover it up. In surveys when women were asked about their attitudes to balding men they said that they would rather a man was bald and confident with it then attempting to cover up with a comb over or a stupid hair cut.
Women also said that if a man wore his baldness with pride and confidence and forgot about hair loss remedies completely he would still remain attractive to them as he would still be the same person.
Not all people agree as can be seen from Zach Lund and all the other sportsmen who are prepared to sacrifice their sporting careers for a little hair.


