Life Hijacked By Hair Loss – Getting It Back: Tee Jay’s Story

Spencer: Thanks for what you do, my friend. I know I speak for many when I say we appreciate it. Here’s my story.

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I was 24 years old and enjoying an awesome career as a graduate student out of state. Graduation was eminent, and so were the lucrative job offers. Life was good. Nothing could mess this up.

That’s until my genetics decided to rear their ugly head.

I’ll never forget it. I was staying with my parents in California during Christmas of 1997. I was standing in front of a mirror one day brushing my hair, and my mom approached me to say something. To this day, I don’t know what she wanted to say, because she was distracted by what she saw, and instead decided to say: “Tee-Jay, you’re getting a little soft up here, huh?”. She put her fingers near my frontal hairline.

Huh?!??! You’re kidding, right mom? My hair is just wet and full of mousse, so of course it’s looks soft right now. Regretfully, she wasn’t kidding. During my Christmas break in California, I had the chance to see other family and friends. A few of them made similar comments. Right in front of me, a friend of the family looked at my mom and said “Tee-Jay is losing his hair up top, eh?”. Gee, thanks, it’s nice to see you too. A-hole.

I guess I was in denial about my hair loss until then. But, now with these comments so readily made directly to my face, as if I had no sensitivities at all, the fight began. My fight against hair loss.

Admittedly I hadn’t a clue what I was doing when I started the fight. I left California for my last semester of graduate school. Shortly after I got there, I went to a hair salon for a hair cut. And guess what? The hair stylist decided to point out my hair loss, too. (Guess how much of a tip I gave him.). But he did get my attention. With my sensitivity about my hair loss so incredibly heightened after my trip home to California, this hair stylist knew just what to say. He said: “Have you ever heard of Nioxin?”. Nope, never have. But he sold me on the fact that I needed to start using it to get my hair back. He said it will “bio-stimulate my scalp”. WOW! Bio-stimulate? Sounds awesome. As a student I was pretty broke, and the Nioxin stuff cost 90 bucks. But I didn’t even hesitate. I bought a bunch of Nioxin products. After all, I needed the bio-stimulation to get my lost hair back and to stop further progression. I remember using the Nioxin shampoo in the shower. It made my scalp feel VERY tingly, and I thought “It’s working!”. No more hair loss, I won the fight. Mind you, I’m a hardcore scientist/engineer type – I need data to understand and prove things. But not in this case, the word “bio-stimulate” and a tingly scalp were all I needed.

Unfortunately the Nioxin didn’t arrest my hair loss as I originally thought, and the proof came 6 months later, when I graduated and moved back home to California. My family and friends, as sensitive as they can be, decided to point out my continued hair loss. UGH! This is supposed to be the best time of my life and it has been totally jacked with hair loss issues.

The next level of the fight began. I was watching late nite TV (I know you know where this is going), and there was this miraculous, never-ending infomercial from a big hair transplant clinic. Wow, they had the answers to everything. They made it look so easy. They had celebrities too. And they had these incredible before and after pictures! I couldn’t stop watching and I couldn’t wait for the nite to turn into morning, so I can find their nearest California office, and make my appointment. And that’s exactly what I did. A few days later I was in their upscale California office, talking face-to-face with a NON-physician, who was telling me everything I wanted to hear. He said “So your hair loss is affecting the way you comb it? We can fix that with a hair transplant.” Later a doctor came in, but by that time, I was sold. He could have said anything. What’s amazing is they never recommended any sort of treatment plan. Never mention Propecia. Never mentioned Rogaine. Never mentioned how many grafts they would recommend for a hair transplant. So, I decided I’d get 800 grafts. I have no idea why or how, but 800 seemed like a nice number. A few weeks later I was in the chair, and almost $7000 bucks left my pocket. I remember being presented with a long, complicated contract on the day of my surgery, while I was in the chair, just before being anesthetized. I had to sign it to proceed. That seemed odd. Why wasn’t I told about this 2 months earlier when I booked my surgery date?

The results of the hair transplant started to kick in a few months later, but since my hair loss continued (at this point I hadn’t heard much about Propecia, and no one recommended it to me), the results didn’t show too well. It was basically just a wash. And, the results I did get didn’t look too natural. So much for the comment made on the infomercial: “Upon close inspection, no one will be able to tell”. So why were people’s eyes wandering to my head? Why did a hair stylist who was washing my hair say to me “so when did you get this done?”.

So what did I do? I started to save money for my next hair transplant. I needed to fix this. I’m sure I just needed another hair transplant. A few years later, I went back to the same hair transplant clinic, ready to go. I said “I’d like the same doctor I had last time”. (And I let them know his name, too). But he was not there. I was told that he may have moved to another location, and that it was common for doctors to change locations. Instead I consulted with another doctor. This other doctor seemed oddly anxious and excited, but for some reason, it didn’t bother me. He said what I wanted to hear, so, that’s all I needed. I booked a date for my next surgery.

Now, I’m a naturally very curious person, and something didn’t seem right about the nonchalant nature in which I was told that my previous doctor may have changed locations. A few nites later, I decided to poke around on the Internet, to see if I can find the new location that my previous doctor went to. I couldn’t believe what I found. He had quit working for the clinic some time ago, and was tangled in a lawsuit against them. He sued them. Many of the proceedings were freely available as public records, and the doctor had testified statements that blew my mind. His statements directly contradicted statements that were made in the infomercials, essentially claiming them to be false. The very infomercials that sold me! I was freaked out. I decided I didn’t want to go through with my second hair transplant with this clinic, and called them to cancel my surgery. Interestingly, a few days after I called to cancel, I received a letter from the clinic, which contained the new contact information of my original doctor.

I felt stuck. I felt as though I exhausted all of my options. At least the options I was aware of. I was bound to be bald, with a little tuft of a mediocre hair transplant on top of my head.

Then, one day at an NBA game, I remember seeing a fairly pronounced advertisement near the courtside. It was a website address, and by the name of it, I could easily tell it was the address to a hair loss treatment clinic. I logged into memory. I checked it out later that nite, and felt very comfortable with what I read. The website belonged to a doctor’s office. A small, private office. Not a big clinic where no one knows your name. I also learned that the doctor belonged to an organization called “International Alliance of Hair Restoration Surgeons” (the IAHRS). I checked out the IAHRS website, too, and liked everything I read. The website acknowledged the over-marketing hype of big hair transplant clinics, and how they seemed to prey on the emotional sensitivities of hair loss sufferers. Eight years after my fight against hair loss started, it finally felt like a wave of genuine empathy towards my hair loss suffering was flowing in my direction.

I scheduled a consultation with the IAHRS doctor a few weeks later. It was an awesome consultation. It felt so authentic, honest, and real. The doctor spent over an hour with me, and he never made it feel rushed. He taught me everything, about hair line design, follicular unit transplantation, density, available medications (Propecia), and more. He highly recommended that I start a Propecia regimen, and I did.

Two years after my initial consultation with the IAHRS doctor, once I put my finances and scheduling together, I returned for a hair transplant. The whole experience was smooth as silk. Total comfort. And unlike my original hair transplant, in which 90% of the procedure was handled by technicians, with very little presence of the actual doctor, this IAHRS doctor was VERY present – 100% of the time. He led the whole surgery, start to finish.

As of this writing, I am about 6 -7 months post op, and the results are beginning to show. The slight plugginess of my previous hair transplant are softening, and I am getting some nice density. My youth is coming back. I consider myself very lucky, because I almost proceeded down the path of multiple hair transplants with a clinic that didn’t feel to me as though they truly care about their patient’s results. Who knows where I would have landed and how much money I could have spent. But circumstances changed the course of my fight against hair loss, for the better.

I’m 35 now. I’m on Propecia, and I’ve had 2 hair transplants, with the 2nd one being the only one I ever want to remember or talk about, because it was awesome, and the results are awesome. The IAHRS doctor is phenomenal, a true advocate of his patients, and a good, pure-hearted, empathetic man.

And that’s my story. I hope my story helps any hair loss sufferers from avoiding some of the pitfalls and traps that are out there, and leads them into a legitimate treatment program that suits them the best.

Good luck in your fights my friends. And be strong.

Tee Jay

 

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6 Comments

  • Elizabeth

    Hi Tee Jay,
    Where did you go to grad school? You mentioned that it was out of state, so not California – was it by any chance in Boston? The reason why I ask is because I went to school in Medford (outside of Boston) from 93 to 97 and started shedding hair too. And I’m a woman! Just curious since it could be an environmental factor as well.
    Thanks,
    Elizabeth

  • TeeJay

    Hi Elizabeth — great guess! I did go to grad school in Boston, or more specifically, Cambridge. I was there from 1996 to 1999, roughly the same time as you.

    I never heard about the possibility of hair loss by environmental factors, but, I guess anything is possible.

    Have you been diagnosed by a doctor?

  • Elizabeth

    Hi TeeJay,

    Sorry for taking so long to write back (holidays) – Yes, my dermatologist did a scalp biopsy that determined it was androgenetic alopecia. Coincidentally my mother noticed that my hair was thinning first too.

    I have a few theories, one of which is environmental – specifically the tap water that I used to drink unfiltered at the time on campus. I heard that we weren’t supposed to do that because of a high lead content or something along those lines. Unfortunately, I didn’t really heed much mind because bottled water was expensive.

    Granted, genetics must play a role in predisposing some people to this condition. I also believe the drastic change in my diet could account partly for triggering this hair loss. I went from eating exclusively home-cooked (and therefore low-sodium) food to cafeteria fare and fast food takeout. (Even in high school I brought lunch from home). I bring this up because I read somewhere that salt can damage kidneys which in turn can affect hair growth.

    Anyway, I’m surprised that I guessed right. I wonder if being from out-of-state makes a difference (I came from NY). Perhaps switching to a new water supply was too jarring for the immune system?

  • Balding Fast

    TeeJay,

    Glad to see you eventually got it resolved. That first transplant sounds like a nightmare I’d like to avoid. Conversely, your second IAHRS doc sounds phenomenal. Can you give me the number/ website link?

    – Balding Fast

  • Glad to hear that worked out well for you.

    But for the other young men loosin hair…Why don’t more men just shave their heads and not give a crap (unless you are a movie star and need hair for a specific part)?!? I just noticed I am going a pretty fine in the front so I got Nioxin from my barber-don’t know if it’ll work, but I ain’t pumping myself with BS medication so there’s not many options (although I heard about lasers, and I use LLLT with AMAZING success on my sports injuries, they get fixed permanently after about 10 sessions tho, you only need to go back a few times if you re-injure. I just wouldn’t want to use hair lasers forever because of cost and longterm health concerns)

    I sometimes have had it shaved so low anyways since back high school. If I loose enough hair I am shaving it off almost completely, I might go ahead and do it anyways even if I don’t lose much hair. The downside is you look a little TOO tough instead of tryin to be pretty, but leave the pretty for the girls (also, as a guy looking at girls…. girls hair ain’t what we lookin first, second, maybe 10th or something… maybe only B***ches and loser wimp men care about your ‘bad’ hair. I dated a chick who apparent;y had really bad hair, but I think I was looking at her butt for the entire relationship), . All my friends who are young and bald ended up getting built like elite athletes and it looks like they meant shave their head as part of the look.

    Pick a bald athlete or fit movie star character that resembles you a bit and aim for that look. I am aiming for the Fabiano Iha look, I think he looks better without hair anyway.

    I hope you all have success with your hair growth attempts…but be a man if it doesn’t work. I think women like survival skills and financial stability in a mutual relationship…not fairy male model hair. Just look at Dana White owner of UFC

    Shave yo head…hit the gym + sports hard…no steroids though 😉

  • I’ve been using Nixon system 3 for about 2 mnths, I like it but my hair has gone a bit more thinner than it was b4 I started it, I asked my stylist and he said that was just dead hair it was bound to fall out anyway, is this bad or good I dnt noe anyone who cld give me advice would be great!

 
 

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