Aditi’s Widening Partition: A Traya Journey Back to Density
Traya Journey at a Glance
- Main concern: A widening partition and “baldness-like” visibility on the upper scalp that felt hard to hide.
- What seemed to be driving it: The coach linked it to digestion, metabolism, stress, and hormones affecting internal nourishment to hair.
- What she used: A personalized hair treatment plan with Defence Shampoo and Defence Conditioner, Scalp Oil mixed with Calm Therapy shot, Minoxidil 2%, plus Hair Vitamin for Her, Her Nourish, and Hair Santulan 01.
- Timeline she was guided on: Expect 3 months for visible change; reduction in hair fall by month 3, and better thickness/density by month 4 with consistency.
- Outcome she was working toward: A healthier scalp environment and visible improvement in density where the scalp was showing.
The day the “upper area” started bothering her
It wasn’t just the partition anymore.
Aditi, a working professional from India, had already shared her scalp pictures with the Traya team. When the hair coach called for her first consultation, Aditi didn’t talk about dramatic hair fall. She talked about what she couldn’t unsee.
“The partition was there,” she explained, “but the upper area… it looks like baldness. I can’t keep opening it again and again. My main concern is that it should fill up somehow.”
That sentence carried a very specific kind of anxiety: the kind that comes when your hair starts changing in a way you can’t style your way out of.
When the Traya coach connected the dots beyond the scalp
After reviewing Aditi’s hair test and checking her scalp images, the coach didn’t frame it as a single-problem situation. She explained that Aditi’s key triggers looked like a combination of digestion, metabolism, stress, and hormones, which can reduce the internal nourishment hair follicles need.
In simple terms, when digestion and metabolism aren’t supporting proper absorption, the nutrients your body is supposed to send to “non-essential” tissues like hair often get deprioritized. Add stress and hormonal fluctuations into the mix, and the hair cycle can start feeling unstable: hair gets weaker at the root, strands become finer, and the scalp becomes more visible in the very places you part your hair most often.
This is exactly where the digestion and hair fall connection becomes more than a theory; it becomes a lived experience, because the change shows up right on your head.
Q: Can digestion and metabolism really affect hair density?
Yes. When digestion and metabolism are sluggish, nutrient absorption can suffer, which can reduce nourishment reaching hair follicles. Over time, hair can weaken and look thinner, especially at the parting and crown.
Her doubts were practical, and they were real
Aditi’s questions weren’t dramatic. They were the questions people ask when they want to do things correctly and fear making it worse.
She wanted clarity on:
How to take the supplements (“Vitamins and medicines… how do I take them?”), when to apply Minoxidil (“Minoxidil kab lagana hai?”), whether it would make her hair greasy (“After applying, it won’t make my hair greasy, right?”), and the one question that sits behind all hair loss decisions: “How many months until results show?”
She also pushed back gently when the coach warned about initial shedding. “My hair fall isn’t that much,” she said, not wanting to invite a new problem.
The coach met that fear head-on, explaining that with Minoxidil, shedding can happen in the first few weeks because weaker hairs fall so stronger hairs can take their place. It was reassurance with a timeline, not a vague promise.
The lifestyle piece: why she washed her hair three times a week
Aditi shared something surprisingly relatable: she washed her hair on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, and her scalp type felt “combination.”
But there was another reason she stuck to three washes.
When her scalp looked more visible from the top, it felt “ganda” - unclean or messy - especially when it started appearing grey-ish or more obvious. So even if the coach recommended oiling before hair wash twice a week ideally, Aditi needed a routine that respected how she lived day to day, not just what sounded perfect on paper.
The coach didn’t shame her for it. She simply said it was okay to continue.
That’s often the difference between a plan that works and a plan that gets abandoned.
The turning point: a routine that finally felt doable
Once the “why” was clear, the coach translated it into an easy split: wash-day products versus daily products.
For wash days, Aditi was guided to use:
Traya Scalp Oil, with the Calm Therapy shot mixed into it, applied at least 30 minutes before a wash; Defence Shampoo to cleanse; and Defence Conditioner on hair lengths for 1–2 minutes.
This matters because Traya’s Scalp Oil is designed to maintain scalp health and stimulate hair follicles through regular oil massage, supporting circulation and nourishment. Calm Therapy, used as a booster oil, is positioned for those dealing with high stress and sleep concerns, so the oiling ritual becomes more than hair care; it becomes a calming practice.
For daily use, Aditi had:
Minoxidil 2% (1 ml on a dry scalp in the morning after bathing, and 1 ml at night before bed, applied only where scalp visibility was higher, and without massage), Hair Vitamin for Her, Her Nourish, and Hair Santulan 01.
The coach also emphasized a detail most people miss: serum penetrates better when the scalp is clean.
The internal support: why supplements were part of her plan
Aditi’s kit included internal support because her root causes weren’t only cosmetic.
Hair Vitamin for Her was prescribed as part of addressing nutritional gaps that many women face, especially when everyday food doesn’t meet macro and micro needs that affect hair health. Her Nourish was positioned as an internal supplement taken morning and night after meals, while Hair Santulan 01 was part of her longer-term plan.
In her words, she just wanted a clear schedule:
“Hair Vitamin for Her in the morning after breakfast.”
“Her Nourish… two tablets in the morning and two after dinner.”
“Hair Santulan 01… two tablets at night after dinner.”
The coach repeated it patiently until Aditi felt confident.
The timeline that reduced her anxiety
When Aditi asked when she’d see results, the coach didn’t oversell. She set expectations:
The first two months are about shedding weaker hair and improving scalp readiness. By month three, she could expect a reduction in hair fall. By month four, she could start seeing improvement in thickness, density, and regrowth.
That timeline matters because it gives your brain something to hold onto when the mirror feels unforgiving.
Resolution: starting tomorrow, with support in her pocket
At the end of the call, Aditi committed to starting the next day: “I guess kal se.”
She also had an app to refer to, a “How to use” section for videos, and permission to book another call if she got stuck. Not just products in a box, but a system that made her feel less alone in the process.
For someone worried about a widening partition and that “baldness-like” upper scalp, that’s often the first real win: a plan you can actually follow, and a timeline that doesn’t ask you to panic in silence.
Key Questions Answered in This Blog
- How long does Traya take to show visible results for thinning and a widening part?
- Is initial shedding with Minoxidil 2% normal, even if hair fall wasn’t severe earlier?
- What’s the right way to build a wash-day routine with Scalp Oil, shampoo, and conditioner?
- Why are digestion, metabolism, stress, and hormones discussed in a hair fall plan?

































