Traya Journey at a Glance
- Key concern: Persistent hair fall with dandruff flare-ups and thinning new growth
- Root causes: Thyroid imbalance, inconsistent scalp cleansing, stress around texture changes
- Products used: Thyro Santulan, Traya Scalp Oil with booster, Hair Active Serum, supportive supplements
- Timeline: Initial adjustment in the first month, visible reduction by month three
- Outcome: Calmer scalp, steadier hair fall, and confidence returning with consistency
The first thing Asha noticed wasn’t the hair on her pillow. It was the third day after a wash, when her scalp felt itchy again and flakes began to show. Living in Nagpur, she had learned to shrug off seasonal dandruff, but this time it came with something else - more hair in the drain, softer lengths giving way to frizz at the roots, and a quiet worry she couldn’t quite shake.
Asha, a working professional in her early thirties, had been managing her thyroid with daily medication. She did everything “right” on paper: washing her hair twice a week, avoiding harsh treatments after years of keratin, and trying not to overthink the shedding. But hair fall doesn’t stay on paper. It follows you into the mirror, into the way you tie your hair, into the hesitation before stepping out.
When Hair Fall Starts to Feel Complicated
On her first call with Traya, Asha said it plainly. She was taking thyroxine, and apart from that, nothing else felt out of place. Yet the hair fall persisted. Some days her scalp felt oily by the third day, other times dry flakes showed up even after a wash. The pattern wasn’t obvious, and that uncertainty was part of the stress.Her coach listened and explained something Asha hadn’t connected before. Thyroid imbalance can quietly weaken hair strands, making them detach sooner than they should. Add an inconsistent scalp environment - sometimes oily, sometimes dry - and follicles don’t get the stability they need. Over time, this combination can show up as dandruff and dry scalp hair loss, even if each issue seems minor on its own.
The goal wasn’t to attack one symptom, but to steady the system as a whole.
Can thyroid issues really affect hair this much?
Yes. When thyroid levels are off, hair can enter the shedding phase earlier. Even with medication, the body needs sustained internal support and a stable scalp routine to help hair regain strength.Addressing the Doubts She Didn’t Say Out Loud
Asha had questions, even if she didn’t frame them as fears. Would she lose more hair once she started a serum? Would her naturally semi-curly new growth ever feel soft again without chemical treatments? And how long would she have to wait before knowing if this was actually working?Her coach didn’t rush those questions. She explained that a temporary increase in shedding can happen when a hair active serum begins working. It’s not new loss, just weaker, already-detached strands making way for healthier growth. “It’s a sign the scalp is responding,” she reassured her. Visible change, she said, usually begins around the third month, once the scalp environment stabilizes.
A Routine That Finally Felt Manageable
What made the difference for Asha wasn’t just the products - it was how they fit into her life. She was guided to oil her scalp thirty minutes before washing, using Traya’s Scalp Oil blended with a booster shot, then wash twice a week to keep flakes from building up. The Hair Active Serum became a simple nightly step: one measured dropper, gently spread, no heavy massage.Internally, Thyro Santulan was added alongside her existing medication to support metabolism and hormonal balance without interference. The coach explained how consistent nourishment helps new hair grow stronger and how this personalized hair treatment plan was designed to adapt as her progress changed.
Asha appreciated the honesty about timelines. The first month would focus on scalp reset. By the third, hair fall reduction could be expected. Volume and texture improvements would follow, not overnight, but steadily.
Small Changes, Real Relief
Within weeks, Asha noticed her scalp felt calmer between washes. The flakes didn’t disappear instantly, but they stopped surprising her. More importantly, the anxiety around her hair began to ease. She wasn’t guessing anymore; she had a rhythm, reminders on the app, and a coach checking in.By the time she spoke about her hair again, it wasn’t with frustration. It was with curiosity about maintenance - how long supplements would continue, and what stayed once the kit simplified. For the first time in a while, hair care felt less like damage control and more like self-trust.
Key Questions Answered in This Blog
- Can thyroid imbalance cause ongoing hair fall even with medication?
- Does inconsistent washing worsen dandruff-related shedding?
- Is initial shedding normal when starting a hair growth serum?
- How long does a structured Traya plan take to show results?
Read More Stories:
- Asha’s Thyroid Hair Fall Journey: Finding Balance with Traya
- Amit’s Hair Fall Journey: Finding Control After Years of Thinning
- Rahul’s Journey: From Persistent Dandruff to Visible Hair Regrowth
- Yashpal’s 3-Year Hair Fall Journey: How Scalp Care and Consistency Changed Everything
- Shalini’s Hair Recovery After Thyroid Surgery: A Traya Journey
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