Asha’s Hairline Worry and the Routine That Helped
Traya Journey at a Glance
- Key problem: Hair fall with occasional scalp itching, plus worry about a receding hairline near the forehead.
- Root causes discussed: Dandruff/scalp irritation, along with digestion, nutrition, and low metabolism affecting nourishment to hair roots.
- What she used: Anti-dandruff night lotion, anti-dandruff shampoo, conditioner, Nourish Oil, plus supplements like Hair Vitamin and Iron Santulan (scheduled with guidance on existing multivitamins).
- Timeline she was guided for: First month to clean the scalp; serum to be added later; hair fall control expected around month 4 and thickness/texture improvements from month 5 onward.
- Outcome (shift): She moved from “Will hair come back at the hairline?” uncertainty to a structured, coach-led routine with progress tracking and a clear expectation of what “normal” looks like early on.
The moment the worry became real
Asha, a 47-year-old woman from a North Indian city, sounded polite and practical on the call. But one line gave away what was really bothering her.
“Forehead ke aas-paas jo… recede kar rahe hain. Hair wahan pe bhi aa jaayenge na?”
It wasn’t just hair fall anymore. It was the fear of change you can’t unsee once you notice it in the mirror.
She had already started the tablets and capsules “kal se hi,” and she’d done her first wash using the kit instructions. She was trying - she just needed someone to confirm she was doing the right things in the right order.
What Asha had been doing before Traya
Asha wasn’t on any regular medication. She mentioned she was taking multivitamins, and nothing else. Her hair wash routine was simple too: usually once a week, sometimes twice in summer.
Her scalp, according to her, was “normal,” not oily, and she didn’t see obvious flakes. But she did mention something important: “Scalp pe itching hoti hai kabhi-kabhi.” That tiny detail often sits at the center of dandruff and dry scalp hair loss - where the scalp isn’t dramatically flaky, but it’s irritated enough to quietly disrupt comfort and hair health.
She also brought up a health detail that had been on her mind: her periods weren’t irregular, but they were scanty and had been that way for a long time. She wasn’t taking anything for it, and the coach acknowledged it could happen around her age while still keeping the focus on overall internal health support.
When the root cause finally sounded… explainable
Priyanka, her Traya hair coach, didn’t pin everything on one reason. She explained that Asha’s hair fall had multiple layers: dandruff, digestion, nutrition, and low metabolism.
In simple terms, she connected the dots: dandruff and scalp irritation can weaken and damage roots, and internal factors can reduce the “proper nutrition” reaching the hair. That’s the digestion and hair fall connection many people miss - if absorption and internal balance are off, hair follicles often get the leftovers.
And that’s why Traya’s approach in Asha’s kit wasn’t just “one product for hair fall.” It was a combination: weekly scalp-care topicals for the outside, and daily supplements for inside support.
- Q: Does dandruff really cause hair fall even if it isn’t visible?
Yes. Even when dandruff isn’t clearly seen as flakes, scalp itching and irritation can signal an unhealthy scalp environment. That irritation can weaken roots over time, leading to more shedding - especially if the scalp isn’t kept clean and calm consistently.
The questions she was almost shy to ask
Asha didn’t sound dramatic. Her doubts were the kind most people keep to themselves until they finally speak to an expert.
She asked about her scanty periods because the hair test form didn’t have that option. She wanted to make sure it mattered. She also needed reassurance about the hairline near her forehead.
And when the coach explained that serum may cause temporary increased shedding at first, Asha listened carefully and confirmed she understood. That moment matters, because it sets expectations early: if you’re not warned about it, normal “healing” shedding can feel like failure.
The turning point: a routine that finally felt doable
What changed for Asha wasn’t just information - it was structure.
Priyanka broke the kit into two clear buckets: wash-day products (lotion, oil, shampoo, conditioner) and daily supplements. Then she personalized one key thing based on Asha’s habits: frequency.
Since Asha washed once a week, Priyanka advised moving to at least twice weekly to keep the scalp cleaner - especially because later, when a serum is added, a congested scalp can interfere with absorption.
Asha’s wash-day routine, as explained to her, looked like this: apply the Anti-dandruff Night Lotion on the scalp the night before hair wash (no massage, just spread gently), apply Nourish Oil 30 minutes before shampoo the next morning, wash with Anti-dandruff Shampoo, and then use conditioner on hair lengths.
This wasn’t framed as a “perfect routine.” It was framed as a workable one.
The supplement clarity she didn’t know she needed
Asha had already been taking multivitamins, so Priyanka added an important instruction: don’t take the Traya Hair Vitamin alongside another multivitamin. Finish the current multivitamin first, then start Hair Vitamin.
In Asha’s kit plan, supplements included Hair Vitamin (built for nutritional deficiencies and fortified with ingredients like biotin, vitamins and minerals, and natural DHT blockers such as pumpkin seed extract) and Iron Santulan, which is designed for anemia-triggered hair fall and supports natural iron absorption and energy levels. For many women, iron deficiency hair fall recovery is not just about “taking iron,” but about consistent absorption and internal support - something her coach reinforced by asking her to take supplements after meals.
The timeline that made her exhale
Asha wanted to know the big question: “Result kab milega?”
Priyanka gave her a realistic map, not false urgency. She explained that results take a minimum of four months. The first month focuses on cleaning the scalp, and then serum would be added later in the journey. She also prepared Asha for a temporary increase in hair fall when serum starts, because it can push out weaker, “dead” hair so the natural growth cycle can continue properly.
For Asha, that mattered because she wasn’t looking for quick fixes - she was looking for something she could trust.
Resolution: not a miracle, but momentum
By the end of the call, Asha wasn’t “cured.” But she was no longer guessing.
She had started the routine, understood why scalp cleanliness mattered, knew why early shedding might happen, and had a follow-up plan for tracking progress. She even agreed to upload a scalp image if the widening or recession near her hairline continued - so the next kit could be guided more precisely.
That’s what a personalized hair treatment plan looks like in real life: not one heroic product, but consistent care, clear expectations, and someone checking in when doubts return.
Key Questions Answered in This Blog
- Can dandruff or scalp itching lead to hair fall even without visible flakes?
- What’s the digestion and hair fall connection, and why does it matter in a hair routine?
- How long does Traya take to show visible hair fall control and improvement in thickness?
- Should you take Traya Hair Vitamin if you’re already on a multivitamin?

































