Rohit’s Hair Plateau: Finding Progress After “Stable”
Traya Journey at a Glance
- Key problem: Rohit noticed hair fall for nearly 2 years, with crown-area scalp visibility that felt “stable” after initial improvement.
- Context/root causes discussed: Hereditary hair fall, plus the possibility of nutrition gaps that can hold back further improvement even after long-term topical use.
- What he used: Traya Minoxidil serum, Scalp Oil mixed with Growth Therapy (booster oil), and internal support with Hair Ras, Health Tatva, and Hair Vitamins.
- Timeline he was guided for: Continue consistently and reassess around the 5th month for visible changes.
- Outcome (so far): A clearer, more structured routine and realistic expectations - maintain what’s improved and try for further growth without false promises.
The line that stayed with Rohit was simple: “It’s stable - neither decreasing nor increasing.”
For someone who’d already done six PRP sessions and used 5% minoxidil continuously for two years, “stable” was both a relief and a frustration. Relief because things hadn’t worsened. Frustration because the crown area still showed scalp, and the progress seemed to have hit a ceiling.
When “stable” starts feeling like stuck
Rohit, a working professional from a metro city, had been noticing hair fall for “two years.” He didn’t come in as a first-timer trying to decode shampoos and oils. He came in as someone who’d already been disciplined.
He told the coach he had seen “significant improvement” earlier - PRP plus minoxidil had reduced the visibility that used to bother him. But over the last six months, he felt he’d reached a threshold. No visible worsening, but no visible growth either.
That’s when he chose Traya, in his words, because minoxidil was part of it, “but additionally something else is also there that makes impact.”
What the coach noticed from his scalp images
Rohit asked the coach to check his photos. While reviewing his uploaded scalp image (he mentioned he had uploaded it on 8th December), the coach reflected what she could see: a bit of scalp visibility in the crown area even after long-term topical use.
And then she did something that instantly changed the tone of the call - she didn’t overpromise.
She explained that after two years of continuous minoxidil use, there isn’t an “assurance” of regrowth. Not because growth is impossible, but because it may or may not happen in such cases. Rohit double-checked what he heard, asking if she meant growth wasn’t possible. She clarified: possible, yes - but not guaranteed.
That honesty mattered, because it made the plan feel grounded, not salesy.
The missing piece: heredity plus internal support
Rohit was convinced his hair fall was “purely on heredity basis.” He also confirmed he wasn’t dealing with ongoing dandruff (it was there at the start, but not anymore), and he denied gut concerns like IBS/IBD.
Still, the coach offered a practical layer to the story: even with hereditary hair fall, internal factors like nutrition can influence how well the hair follicles keep up - especially when you’ve already been on a topical routine for a long time. That’s where Traya’s internal supplements can support overall hair health from within.
This is where a lot of people get surprised by the digestion and hair fall connection: even when the trigger is genetic, your follicles still rely on consistent nourishment.
- Q: If it’s hereditary, can supplements still help?
Yes - because even hereditary hair fall can be influenced by internal nourishment and absorption. Traya’s internal support is designed to work on nutrition and metabolism so the follicles get better support alongside topicals.
The doubts he voiced out loud
Rohit’s questions were the kind you ask only when you’ve already tried things.
He asked, plainly, what to expect: could Traya “increase” his hair now that he’d plateaued? And when he heard “no assurance,” he pushed back to confirm he wasn’t being told it was impossible.
Later, when the coach explained Hair Ras dosage - two tablets after breakfast and two after dinner - he paused again: “Four tablets… that’s a lot.” It’s a small moment, but it captures the vulnerability of committing to a plan that finally feels bigger than just a serum.
He also had a practical doubt about shampoo: he was already using a dermatologist-recommended one and asked what to do. The coach advised not to mix two shampoos at once and to continue one consistently.
The turning point: a routine that finally felt mapped out
The rest of the call was less about motivation and more about clarity - exactly what most people need when they’re already trying.
The coach laid out a personalized hair treatment plan that Rohit could follow without guesswork:
He was asked to use the minoxidil serum daily - 1 ml in the morning and 1 ml at night, applied only to visible scalp and spread gently without rubbing. The coach also set expectations around “healing shedding” - minoxidil can increase hair fall initially for some people, though Rohit noted he might not see it since he was already using minoxidil.
For weekly care, he was guided to pour the Growth Therapy booster oil fully into the Scalp Oil bottle, mix it, and apply the oil twice a week, 30 minutes before hair wash. The coach suggested washing with Defence Shampoo two to three times weekly depending on need, while also advising him not to juggle multiple shampoos.
And then came the internal support, aimed at strengthening the “inside” side of the routine:
- Health Tatva: one tablet after breakfast and one after dinner daily, positioned as support for digestion and absorption.
- Hair Vitamin: one tablet after breakfast daily, described as the DHT-blocker support in the routine.
- Hair Ras: two tablets after breakfast and two after dinner daily, explained as daily hair nourishment that can also “delay early greying” and improve hair quality.
From the Product Bible, Hair Ras is positioned as “equivalent to Chavanprash for the hair,” supporting scalp and hair health from within, improving blood circulation to hair follicles, and working on tissue nourishment. Health Tatva is described as a digestive stimulant supporting metabolism and nutrient absorption - important when the goal is to ensure nutrient-rich supply reaches the follicles.
Living with patience: the five-month window
Rohit wanted something he could measure. The coach gave him a checkpoint: continue for five months, and if changes are coming, they often start becoming noticeable from the fifth month onward.
No dramatic claims - just a timeline that matched the reality of long-term hair care.
Before ending the call, the coach scheduled a follow-up with a hair coach in 10–12 days, so Rohit wouldn’t be left to interpret everything alone.
Resolution: not a miracle, but momentum
Rohit didn’t end the call with a guaranteed promise - and that’s what makes his story relatable.
He ended with something better: a clear routine, an honest understanding of what long-term minoxidil use can and cannot promise, and a path that combined topical consistency with internal support. For anyone who has tried PRP, stayed on minoxidil, and still feels stuck at “stable,” that shift - from guessing to following a structured plan - can feel like momentum again.
Key Questions Answered in This Blog
- Can hereditary hair fall still improve with a structured plan?
- How should minoxidil be applied for best adherence and scalp comfort?
- What is the digestion and hair fall connection, and why does it matter in long-term cases?
- When does Traya typically suggest looking for visible changes - especially after you’ve plateaued?

































