Sunday 5 January 2014

No Poo - How I Wash My Curly Hair Naturally


No, we're not going to talk about poop today. We'll talk about that later this month. ;)

For today, we'll stick with hair. 'No Poo' refers to washing your hair without shampoo. Yep, this dirty hippy girl doesn't use shampoo.

Now, before you go thinking I am either
a) crazy
b) homeless
c) stinky
d) any combination of the above

...let me clarify! I am not. I bathe, I wash my hair... just not with shampoo. There are oodles of other things that you can (and should!) use to wash your hair.
 
Why not use shampoo?
  1. It's usually filled with toxins. Chemicals that make your skin itch, and your blood boil
  2. You keep a really clean diet - why put that stuff on your skin? Newsflash: your skin covers your entire body, and it's an absorbent little sucker. If you wouldn't put it in your body, don't put it on your body!
  3. If it's 'natural' - it's probably not. And some 'natural' things can be pretty durn scary too.
  4. If it's genuinely natural and harmless - it's probably really expensive.
  5. You have stuff in your kitchen pantry that you could use instead!!!
  6. The shampoo & conditioner cycle really messes with your head... Shampoo strips your hair of the natural oils, and conditioner replaces them. All this leads to one very confused scalp - to produce oil, or not to produce oil?

My shampoo contains one ingredient: bicarb soda
My conditioner contains one ingredient: apple cider vinegar

Easy peasy. Cheap. Natural & toxin-free. Convenient. Simple!


I used to shampoo. And I used to condition. And I used to use all kinds of styling products that left my hair constantly wet, crunchy, crispy, overly stiff, frizzier than when I started, greasy, and/or just plain weird. Because I have crazy ridiculous hair that didn't like to do anything I wanted it to curly hair.

I had read about the No Poo method - just caught snippets of articles for years. But never really thought it was something I could do.
My hair is definitely on the dry side, so I thought surely I neeeeeeed conditioner for the oils!
Then a few things happened, and you better believe I was proven wrong.
I decided (with some convincing from friends) to grow my hair out again. I was loving my long locks, but growing increasingly discontented with the fact that I couldn't find a shampoo/conditioner product range that I was perfectly happy with. I was using a natural-ish shampoo, the best I could find, and then one day... My local organic store stopped stocking it.

This was exactly the final push that I needed.

I decided to embrace the No Poo method, to at least give it a whirl, even though fears of a transition period lurked in my head (see bottom of post for explanation).

I started using bicarb soda and apple cider vinegar and nothing else to wash my hair. And my hair LOVED it! My hair took to it like a duck to water and I felt liberated. Liberated from the grips of commercial and chemical-laden shampoo & conditioner!

I made the change a good year or two ago, and I'm still going strong. Oh, and I only need to wash my hair 'properly' (using the following method) about once every 1-2 weeks. In between, I just rinse with water straight from the shower nozzle.




Here's the No Poo method that works for my dry, curly hair:
1) Wet hair thoroughly.
2) Put about 4 Tablespoons of bicarb soda in a small bowl (I use a metal one, it's probably has about a 3/4 of a cup capacity).
3) Apply almost all of the bicarb soda evenly to your scalp and roots by wetting your hands, taking a small handful, rubbing hands together to create a very thick paste, and massaging evenly over scalp (working in sections).
4) Grab the last handful of bicarb soda, rub your hands to create a thick paste, and apply from the roots down the length of your hair (you only need to do the top approx. 5cm of your hair).
5) Massage scalp well once more, and rinse thoroughly.
6) Fill a small bowl with approx. 1/3 cup apple cider vinegar and top up with 2/3 cup water. Grab the ends of your hair together and dunk into the bowl (getting as much hair in as you can), then pull your hair out.
7) Top up bowl with a little more water (to even further dilute the apple cider vinegar), then pour over your hair to rinse, starting from the scalp. *beware not to get it in your eyes - tilt your head back!
8) Add 1/4 cup of apple cider vinegar to your bowl and top up with 3/4 cup water. Rinse your hair by pouring over.
9) If you have long hair, repeat once more.
10) Rinse thoroughly with only water.
11) And a bonus, this is the drying method that works well for my hair: Gently scrunch dry with a towel (if you have curly hair, pleeeease don't rub it dry), wrap your hair up in a towel for 30 mins so it stops dripping, then let it down and air dry.

HOT TIP: If you have lots of thick, really long hair like I do... this is all so much easier in the bath rather than the shower.


Once your hair is dry, there is NO lingering apple cider vinegar smell. If you want that shampoo-y smell, either fill a spray bottle with water and add a few drops of your favourite essential oil and spritz with that before air-drying... or if you're feeling really indulgent, spritz with diluted rosewater.
I don't regularly spritz with anything, because I like to cut corners & save money, but also because people already tell me my hair smells nice so I don't bother.

How bizarre, hair that actually smells like hair smells nice! (That was a little bit of sarcasm, by the way.)


So what do you reckon? Are ready to ditch the chemicals and jump on the No Poo bandwagon? Do you already do the No Poo?Spin me a little story in the comments below. :)




This post was written for the amazing 31 Days to Better Health and Wellness Challenge. It's not too late to join us! Click over to read all about it and sign up.
http://www.modernalternativemama.com/join-us/?ap_id=HomemadeHealthyHappy






Transition period: Word on the world wide web is that some people experience a 'transition period' when switching to No Poo. Basically, the scalp goes all, "er mah gerd freederm!" and starts producing oils like crazy to make up for all the oil production that has been stifled by the lather-rinse-repeat routine. This settles after a short period, and your scalp gets used to a new life in paradise. Not everyone experiences a transition period - it didn't happen to me and hopefully it won't happen to you! If it does, just wash more often and persist. Once your scalp resets, you'll be golden. :)

5 comments:

  1. My 8 yo has beautiful long curly hair and tempted to give this a go. How do you go with the knots and tangles. And what about after swimming in the pool/beach? Hers gets super knotty then and seems to need the conditioner and also knot spray to get it all untangled again

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. before i swim, i put my hair up in a ponytail and braid it making sure to tuck the ends. I use vinegar to rinse it after the pool/beach then use flax gel spray to get all of the tangles out. I also use marshmallow root to detangle but find that flax makes my hair softer and shinier so i stick with that. Plus flax is easier and cheaper to find...

      Delete
    2. Thanks for your awesome tips Orleatha! You have gorgeous hair!

      Michele, my hair doesn't seem to knot/tangle as much as it used to - I only ever brush it right before I wash it and get tangles out then. Honey and water might be helpful too, but have a read of Orleatha's suggestions because they sound amazing! :)

      Sarah xoxo

      Delete
  2. I'm a no-pooer too and, being black and asian, i have SUPER thick coarse curly hair. my hair LOVES me for it. I use an old t-shirt to dry my hair then I use flax gel (1 Tbsp flax seed boiled in 1C of water for 10 minutes then cooled) in a spray bottle with a few drops of essential oil to detangle. Been doing this for over a year and have no plans on making any changes :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Awesome tip on the flax gel, thanks Orleatha! Love hearing your experience too, it's amazing to find a way of avoiding chemicals that works for so many people! :)

      Sarah xoxo

      Delete