Asha’s Hair Fall Fear and the “White Bulb” Question
Traya Journey at a Glance
- Key problem: “Quite bad… major hair fall,” with strands coming out from the root and a visible white bulb
- Underlying root causes addressed: constipation and the digestion and hair fall connection, along with support for overall nourishment
- Main products used: Scalp Oil + Booster Oil (mixed), Defence Conditioner, Gutt Shuddhi, Iron Santulan, Hair Vitamin, and a nightly hair serum (1 ml)
- Timeline shared by the coach: early weeks may have extra shedding; visible changes start around 3 months; volume improvement around month 4
- Outcome aimed for: stronger roots over time, scalp health support, and a routine the customer could follow consistently
“I can see this… a bulb like white.”
That one detail is what made Asha, a working professional from a North Indian city, pause and ask the question many people are afraid to say out loud: “What is happening exactly? Is my scalp getting loose… or why is this hair fall happening?”
She wasn’t on any ongoing medication. No major health condition. But her hair fall felt anything but normal. And in the middle of it, she added one more line almost casually: “I’m just a little constipated.”
That combination, major shedding plus gut discomfort, became the starting point of her Traya journey.
When hair fall stops feeling “normal”
Asha washed her hair only two to three times a week. Her scalp wasn’t consistently oily or dry; it changed with the weather. In winters it leaned dry, otherwise it got oily quickly after a wash. “As soon as I wash my hair, the next day it starts getting oily,” she explained, trying to make sense of her pattern.
But the real worry wasn’t the oiliness. It was the intensity of hair fall, and the fact that it looked like the hair was coming out from inside - roots and all.
When she shared that she could see a white bulb at the end, you could hear the panic underneath the question. If the hair is coming out with the bulb, doesn’t that mean something is deeply wrong?
The hidden context: constipation and internal nourishment
In Asha’s consultation, her coach didn’t treat hair fall as a single-issue problem. She explained that hair fall can have multiple drivers - digestion, metabolism, stress, and sleep - factors that can weaken hair and trigger shedding.
Asha’s one clear context point was constipation, and that matters because when your gut isn’t functioning smoothly, the body’s ability to use what you eat can suffer. Over time, that “internal supply chain” affects how well hair follicles get nourished. For Asha, the plan wasn’t just about what she’d apply on the scalp, but also about supporting her system from within - so roots could feel stronger, not more fragile.
- Q: Can constipation be linked to hair fall?
Yes - when digestion is off and bowel movements are irregular, it can affect how well your body absorbs nutrients from food. Supporting gut function can be an important part of a more complete hair routine.
The question that held all her fear
Asha’s most vulnerable moment came near the end of the call. She said, in her own words, that the hair was falling “from the roots,” and she could see “a bulb like white.”
Her coach reassured her it wasn’t her scalp becoming loose. She explained that when roots become weak, hair can fall out along with the root end. The focus, then, becomes consistency: improving nourishment, supporting routine, and giving the process time.
It wasn’t an instant fix, and the coach didn’t promise one. The message was simple: “Not instantly… but after some time, when your roots become healthy, this condition will come under control.”
The turning point: a routine that felt doable
Asha had already started the kit “from yesterday,” which mattered - because the coach emphasized consistency and warned that gaps could delay results.
Then came the practical clarity that often becomes the real turning point: how to use each product without confusion.
Asha’s routine was shaped around her actual habits:
She washed her hair two to three times weekly, so the coach suggested keeping it to twice a week - enough to keep the scalp clean so the serum can work, without over-washing.
For wash days, Asha was guided to oil her scalp 7 to 30 minutes before shampoo, mixing the main oil bottle with the smaller booster oil shot in advance and using them together.
This fits with Traya’s Scalp Oil approach: an Ayurvedic herbal oil designed to support scalp health and stimulate hair follicles with regular use, while also supporting circulation and follicular nourishment through consistent massage and application.
For daily support, the coach emphasized supplements after meals for better absorption - because the goal wasn’t only topical care, but internal support too.
What she used and why it matched her concerns
Asha’s kit included a mix of daily and wash-day products, aligned to her stated issues (major hair fall and constipation) and her scalp type (combination).
She was advised:
She would use a Hair Vitamin after a morning meal. Traya Hair Vitamin is positioned for people with hair loss and nutrient gaps, supporting hair and skin health while also including natural DHT blockers like pumpkin seed extract.
For gut support, she was told to take Gutt Shuddhi after dinner. Gutt Shuddhi is designed for people who have gut issues like constipation or irregular bowel movements along with hair fall, supporting gut motility and helping relieve mild constipation.
She was also guided on Iron Santulan, twice a day after meals. Iron Santulan is indicated for people with iron deficiency and supports anemia-related hair fall by helping the body absorb iron naturally from diet. In Asha’s call, there was no diagnosis of anemia, but the product was part of her prescribed plan.
And finally, she had a nightly hair serum: one full dropper (1 ml) applied across the scalp at night, spread gently with fingers without heavy massage. The coach also normalized something that often scares people away: initial shedding.
She explained that in the first few weeks, hair fall can increase as weaker, detached strands shed - so stronger hair can come through. That reassurance mattered, because Asha had already been frightened by what she was seeing at the root.
This is where a personalized hair treatment plan becomes more than a shopping list - it becomes emotional support with structure.
The timeline she was asked to hold onto
Asha didn’t just need products; she needed a timeline to stop spiraling.
Her coach set expectations clearly: changes typically become visible around three months. The first two months focus on scalp health and addressing weaker hair. By the third month, hair fall reduction may start showing. By the fourth month, volume improvement can follow.
Supplements, she was told, may be time-bound (around three to six months), and the routine can later shift into maintenance - often continuing only a couple of products, like the serum.
Resolution: what changed first was her confidence
Asha’s story, as captured in this call, doesn’t end with a final “before-and-after” yet. It ends with something more immediate: her fear finally had an explanation, and her routine finally had a plan.
She came in asking whether her scalp was “getting loose.” She left with a clear understanding: weak roots can cause root-end shedding, and consistency plus internal support can help.
And perhaps most importantly, she didn’t have to figure it out alone. A follow-up was scheduled, and she was reminded she could check “How to use” in the app, log her routine, and use the diet plan feature to support her progress.
Key Questions Answered in This Blog
- Why do I sometimes see a white bulb at the end of fallen hair?
- What is the digestion and hair fall connection, and why does constipation matter?
- Is increased shedding in the first few weeks of a serum a bad sign?
- How long does it take to see visible results with a consistent routine?

































