Traya Journey at a Glance
- Main concern: sudden breakage and lots of short “baby hair” sticking up after a dusty house shift, plus ongoing hair fall.
- Root causes identified: weak hair structure from dryness and texture damage, metabolism not working properly, low iron and diabetes affecting overall nourishment.
- Core products used: Hair Ras 06 supplement, Hair Active Serum, Nourish Hair Oil, Defence Shampoo and Conditioner-based hair wash routine.
- Recovery timeline: first 3 months to stabilise hair fall and prep the scalp, then 6–8 months of deeper internal repair.
- Outcome: a clear, personalized hair treatment plan with realistic expectations for stronger strands, better texture and visible density over time.
“My Baby Hair Just Stands Up and Looks So Bad”
She didn’t come on the call talking about classic hair fall. What really bothered her was how her hair looked.
Asha, a 34‑year‑old working woman from Nagpur, had recently shifted homes. “Bahut dhul mitti gai hogi balon mein,” she told the coach, remembering those hectic moving days. She washed her hair after the shift and noticed something alarming: the front section of her hair had broken off halfway. Suddenly she had a halo of short, stubborn “baby hair” that refused to lie flat.
“They look very bad… ekdam se khade ho jate hain, gande se lagte hain,” she said, half laughing, half embarrassed. She wasn’t just worried about losing hair; she was worried about looking unkempt, no matter how carefully she styled it.
That’s what pushed her to finally order the Traya kit and take the first consultation call.
When Dust Isn’t the Only Problem
On the surface, it sounded simple: one dusty move, one wash, sudden breakage. But as their conversation went deeper, more layers started to show.
Her coach asked about her scalp and hair habits. Asha shared that her scalp used to be “bahut zyada oily,” but lately it had turned quite dry. That shift from oily to dry often means the scalp barrier is struggling, which can leave hair more brittle and easier to snap, especially around the fragile hairline.
Then came another important detail: “I am diabetic,” she mentioned casually, adding that she was on regular diabetes tablets. The coach quietly logged that, because blood sugar imbalance over time can slow healing, affect microcirculation to the scalp and interfere with how well the body uses nutrients - all of which matter when you’re trying to grow out weak, broken strands.
From her Traya hair test, a clearer picture emerged. Her root causes weren’t just external dust and dryness. The coach explained that her metabolism wasn’t working optimally, and her iron levels were on the lower side. That meant even when she ate well, her follicles weren’t getting the steady, rich supply of nutrients they needed. Over time, this can show up as dull texture, easy breakage and thinning - not just long strands falling, but also those baby hairs refusing to grow out properly.
In other words, what she could see in the mirror - the fuzziness around her hairline - was just the visible part of a deeper imbalance.
Can low iron and metabolism issues really affect hair?
Yes. When metabolism slows down and iron is low, the blood can’t deliver enough oxygen and nutrients to the hair roots. This weakens the hair as it grows, so it breaks easily, grows shorter, and takes longer to reach full length. That’s why iron deficiency hair fall recovery isn’t only about tablets; it also needs better digestion and blood flow to the scalp.
The First Big Doubt: “Will My Hair Fall Increase with the Serum?”
Once the coach walked her through the root causes, they moved to the actual plan. Asha listened carefully as the routine was broken into two simple parts: hair wash routine and daily routine.
She had her instructions clearly: Nourish Hair Oil 30 minutes before wash, a gentle shampoo, then conditioner on the lengths. Twice a week. This would keep her dry scalp clean but not stripped, and give her damaged front hair some much‑needed softness so it would be less prone to snapping.
Then came the daily routine: Hair Ras 06 at night after dinner (never on an empty stomach) and the Hair Active Serum, one millilitre at night, applied with a dropper all over the scalp and spread gently.
Here the coach paused. “Ye serum abhi apke scalp ke liye new hai,” she said. “Starting kuch initial weeks aap notice kar sakte ho hair fall thoda increase ho raha hai, jo ki normal aur good sign hai.”
Asha went quiet for a moment. Like many people, she was thinking the same unspoken worry: what if it makes things worse?
The coach explained it in simple language. The serum works first on the weakest strands, the ones already damaged and barely anchored. Those will shed faster at the beginning, making it feel like hair fall has increased. But that “cleaning out” phase is what prepares the scalp for stronger, healthier growth.
“Don’t worry,” the coach reassured her. “Ye control mein aa jaega, aur iske compare mein kaafi achchhe changes dekhne ko milenge.”
You could almost hear Asha exhale. “Samajh gaya,” she said.
Living with Breakage, Baby Hair and Diabetes
For Asha, this wasn’t just about vanity. Those short broken hairs at the front showed up in every photo, on every video call. No amount of tying, clipping or smoothing seemed to hide them. The more she stared at them, the more she worried that they would never grow out, that she’d always have this uneven, frizzy frame around her face.
On top of that, managing diabetes already demanded daily discipline: tablets, food choices, routine. Adding more steps felt heavy at first, but she also knew that ignoring the problem would only make things worse. The coach gently underlined how there’s a real digestion and hair fall connection when metabolism is off and nutrients aren’t being used well, especially in diabetics.
What made the difference was how the plan was broken into manageable, realistic steps instead of a long list of do’s and don’ts.
How the Coach Turned a Kit into a Plan
Instead of just telling her to “use the products,” the coach translated the kit into a simple, lived‑in routine.
For hair wash days, she would oil with Nourish Hair Oil half an hour before, shampoo, then use the Defence Conditioner only on mid‑lengths to ends for one to two minutes. This was designed to improve texture so those baby hairs would become softer and less frizzy as they grew out.
Every night, after dinner, she’d take two tablets of Hair Ras 06. This Ayurvedic formulation from Traya supports stress, metabolism and energy, while herbs like Ashwagandha, Bhringaraj, Amalaki and Guduchi work on strengthening hair from within. For someone with diabetes and sluggish metabolism, it was chosen specifically to support the internal side of her hair fall.
Alongside that, the Hair Active Serum became a non‑negotiable night ritual. One millilitre, all over the scalp, spread gently with fingertips, no harsh massage. The coach didn’t just tell her what to do; she explained what to expect month by month.
In the first month, weaker strands would shed and scalp health would improve, making it “ready” for treatment. By the third month, she could expect hair fall to be controlled. With consistent use of three full kits, she would start seeing long‑lasting changes in density and volume. And because the supplements had an eight‑month course, they would taper later, leaving her with only maintenance products like oil and serum.
Setting that realistic timeline helped her replace panic with patience.
Products That Quietly Did the Work
Without overwhelming her, the coach linked each product to a problem she had shared.
Nourish Hair Oil would nourish dry, frizzy hair and improve texture, making the front section less likely to snap again.
Hair Ras 06 would address internal issues like stress and metabolism that were showing up as poor hair quality and low energy, supporting overall vigour so her strands could grow stronger and longer.
Hair Active Serum would directly stimulate and support the follicles, pushing out weak strands first and then helping new growth come in thicker and healthier along her hairline.
And the gentle shampoo‑conditioner duo would keep her dry scalp clean, restore moisture and reduce further breakage from everyday wear and tear.
By the end of the call, Asha wasn’t just holding a box of products. She had a clear, personalized hair treatment plan anchored in her own health reality - diabetes, low iron, dry scalp and those stubborn baby hairs - with a coach and app to track her journey and check in after ten to twelve days.
From Panic to a Patient, Guided Journey
When they scheduled her follow‑up for a Saturday afternoon, she sounded lighter. “Traya ka journey jaldi se jaldi start karna hai,” the coach reminded her, encouraging her to download the app, log her doses and use the diet tracker to understand her nutrition better.
Asha’s transformation wasn’t instant. It started with understanding: why her hair was behaving this way, why it would take time, and how each small daily action - a tablet after dinner, a few drops of serum at night, a gentle oiling before wash - added up.
That shift from fear to informed patience is where real change begins. Her baby hairs will take months to grow out and blend into the rest of her hair, but now they’re part of a story that’s moving forward, not stuck at the moment everything snapped after a dusty move.
Key Questions Answered in This Blog
- How can diabetes and low metabolism contribute to hair fall and breakage?
- Why does a new hair serum sometimes cause more shedding at the start?
- How long does it take to see visible results with a Traya routine?
- Can improving internal health really help stubborn baby hair grow out evenly?
Read More Stories:
- From Baby Hair Breakage to a Plan: Asha’s Traya Journey
- From Chicken Pox to Confident: Asha’s Traya Hair Journey
- From Doubt to Discipline: Asha’s Early Hair Fall Journey with Traya
- A Decade of Hair Fall and a Helmet: Meera’s Journey Back to Density with Traya
- From Flakes to Confidence: A Bihar Police Officer’s Dandruff and Hair Fall Journey with Traya
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