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Asha’s 6-Year Hair Fall Journey With Traya

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Asha’s 6-Year Hair Fall Journey With Traya

Traya Journey at a Glance

  • She’d been dealing with hair fall for almost 6–7 years and it had started feeling “chronic.”
  • Along with hair fall, she also mentioned dandruff, and frequent gastric acidity.
  • She had already tried Traya’s “We Care serum” for about four months but wanted clearer direction on what to expect next.
  • The coach set expectations: the first three months focus more on internal health, nutrition, and dandruff; visible strengthening and growth typically need longer consistency.
  • Her plan included a personalized hair treatment plan with topical minoxidil, anti-dandruff care, scalp oil + booster oil mix, and internal support like Health Tatva and Hair Vitamin - guided with follow-ups.

The first thing Asha noticed wasn’t a single dramatic moment.

It was the fact that it had been going on for years.

When her Traya hair coach asked how long she’d been dealing with hair fall, Asha’s answer came quickly: “Almost six, seven years.” Not a bad week. Not a stressful month. Years.

And that’s exactly why she booked the call - because when hair fall lasts that long, it stops feeling like a phase and starts feeling like part of your life.

When “seasonal hair fall” doesn’t feel seasonal anymore

Asha had been trying to make sense of her shedding for a long time. In the call, the coach reflected what many people get told: hair fall can fluctuate with water, weather, and seasonal shifts. But Asha’s concern didn’t sound like a temporary spike. She described it as a constant, heavy concern - something that had stayed.

She had already started taking action. She told the coach she’d used “We Care serum” and had been consistent for “four months.” Still, she was left with a familiar question that most long-term hair fall sufferers eventually ask - if I’m doing something, why don’t I feel confident about the results yet?

The context that mattered: dandruff and acidity in the background

As the conversation opened up, Asha also mentioned dandruff. The coach immediately brought in dandruff-specific care, including a dandruff shampoo, and explained how the routine would be set up weekly.

Another thing that surfaced was frequent gastric acidity. It’s easy to ignore digestive discomfort when the main worry is hair, but Traya’s approach doesn’t separate the two - because hair health is rarely just “hair.” The coach discussed internal support and diet guidance alongside the topical plan.

This is where Asha’s story becomes more layered than “I have hair fall.” It’s hair fall with scalp disturbance and gut discomfort running quietly in the background - exactly the kind of mix that makes the problem feel stubborn.

What the coach explained about the “why”

Asha’s coach framed it simply: for many people, the early part of treatment is about bringing the internal system back on track - working on nutrition deficiency, digestion support, and scalp concerns like dandruff - so the body can actually support regrowth.

Dandruff, specifically, can become a cycle. When the scalp is irritated and itchy, people scratch more, inflammation increases, and hair fall can worsen. This dandruff and dry scalp hair loss pattern is why Traya doesn’t treat dandruff as “just flakes,” but as something that can interfere with scalp health.

On the internal side, the coach also leaned into a truth many people underestimate: the digestion and hair fall connection is real in day-to-day life. If your digestion is off and absorption is poor, your hair follicles may not get the nutrient support they need consistently - even if you’re “eating fine.”

Q&A: Does dandruff really cause hair fall?

Yes - dandruff can indirectly increase hair fall. When dandruff leads to itching and irritation, repeated scratching and inflammation can weaken the scalp environment, making hair more likely to shed. That’s why controlling dandruff is often an important first step in a hair routine.

The doubts she voiced (and the reassurance she needed)

Asha didn’t sound dramatic - she sounded practical. She wanted clarity.

At one point, she pushed for what most people want to know: “Eight months… full full hair growth?” She also asked a very specific usage question near the end: whether the Scalp Oil and growth oil should be mixed.

These questions matter because they reveal the emotional reality underneath: she wasn’t only buying products; she was trying to buy certainty. A timeline she could trust. A routine she could do correctly. A reason to believe that consistency would finally pay off.

The coach met that doubt with structure, not hype. They explained that outcomes depend on age and dandruff conditions, and that the first three months often work more on internal health and scalp concerns - while hair strengthening and visible growth typically need four to six months or longer.

The turning point: a routine that felt guided, not guessed

The shift in Asha’s journey was the moment the routine became concrete.

The coach explained how to use topical minoxidil: one ml in the morning and one ml at night, applied and gently spread using fingertips. They also prepared her for the “shedding phase” - telling her that in the beginning, some increased shedding can happen and that it can be part of the process.

For dandruff, the coach recommended using a medicated anti-dandruff shampoo about two to three times a week.

For oiling, the guidance was specific and repeatable: use the scalp oil and mix in the booster oil (“growth oil shot”), shake well, and apply - answering her exact doubt about mixing.

And then came the part that made the plan feel long-term rather than random: follow-ups. The coach set expectations for progress checks and a call back in the coming days, reinforcing that she wouldn’t have to do this alone.

The Traya products that fit Asha’s concerns

Asha’s plan (as discussed on the call) included a combination of topical and internal support, aligned with what she shared:

Traya’s Anti-dandruff Shampoo (Ketoconazole 2%) was recommended because dandruff is linked to fungal overgrowth and can trigger itching and scalp inflammation. The goal here is scalp hygiene and dandruff control, so the scalp environment can support healthy growth.

Topical Minoxidil (women’s or men’s variant would depend on individual profile, but the coach discussed minoxidil use clearly) is positioned to support hair growth by improving blood flow to hair follicles and addressing follicle miniaturization - especially important when hair fall has been long-standing.

Health Tatva was included as internal support aimed at digestion and absorption, especially relevant because Asha mentioned frequent acidity. (It’s also important that Health Tatva should not be taken in gastric ulcers.)

Hair Vitamin was discussed as part of a supplement routine, since nutrition gaps often contribute to chronic shedding and thinning.

Scalp Oil plus the Growth Therapy booster oil shot supported follicular nourishment through massage and circulation - something that becomes especially helpful when stress and scalp health are part of the picture.

Resolution: choosing the long game

Asha didn’t end the call with a miracle result - she ended it with something more useful: clarity.

She came in with years of hair fall, an already-started serum routine, and a head full of doubts about timelines and usage. She left with a mapped-out plan, realistic expectations, and simple instructions she could follow every day.

For someone who’s lived with chronic shedding, that’s often the first real win - when the journey finally feels explainable, trackable, and doable.

Key Questions Answered in This Blog

  • If I’ve had hair fall for 6–7 years, can a routine still help?
  • How are dandruff and hair shedding connected?
  • What’s the digestion and hair fall connection, and why does Traya address gut health?
  • How long does a personalized hair treatment plan usually need before visible change?
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