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My husband has been using Nioxin System number 1 now for many months. Prior to using Nioxin he tried many products with no luck. He is so happy with the results.
S hair seems more vibrant and fuller. He will not use anything else on his hair. Honestly, I have heard nothing but good things about Nioxin.My husband heard about Nioxin actually from one of his good friends who was using it (and still is.
) I suggest trying it to see what you think. What works great for one person may not be the best products for another. I will include a link below that will take you straight to the Nioxin official site.
There you will be able to view all the products. As for the systems, there are eight, for all types of thinning hair. Choose which is best for you and then you can use the product locator tool to find a salon near you that sells Nioxin.
Here is the link, good luck! nioxin.com/en/home.aspx
I have used the system. I believe it is complete BS, unfortunately. The company, if you look at their marketing materials, uses absolutely no scientific claims nor gives any reason why the product should work.
Their only claim is that more users than not claim that their hair appears fuller. That's it. That's all.My opinion is that people use it for a while, don't get a haircut, and, miraculously, HAVE MORE HAIR!
WOW! People are inherently suggestible. I believe that we are hardwired to take people's word.
As an early species, if we didn't listen to our parents saying, "Don't go in the woods- there is a bear there," we'd probably be dead. I think we are genetically predisposed to believe claims, rather than not. For instance, watch the episode of Penn & Teller BS!
On alternative medicine, where they stick magnets on oven mitts, put snails on people's faces, play kazoos, and use plungers on people, and all of the people were convinced that they "felt better," had "less anxiety," "relieved pain," etc... I think it is marketing genius: slippery, vague verbiage on the bottle, snake oil for the masses under the guise of the fallacies of "appeal to authority" and "bandwagon. " Or maybe I am just angry that my hair is thinning, LOL!
My husband has been using Nioxin System number 1 now for many months. Prior to using Nioxin he tried many products with no luck. He is so happy with the results.
His hair seems more vibrant and fuller. He will not use anything else on his hair. Honestly, I have heard nothing but good things about Nioxin.
My husband heard about Nioxin actually from one of his good friends who was using it (and still is. ) I suggest trying it to see what you think. What works great for one person may not be the best products for another.
I will include a link below that will take you straight to the Nioxin official site. There you will be able to view all the products. As for the systems, there are eight, for all types of thinning hair.
Choose which is best for you and then you can use the product locator tool to find a salon near you that sells Nioxin. Here is the link, good luck! nioxin.com/en/home.aspx
I have used the system. I believe it is complete BS, unfortunately. The company, if you look at their marketing materials, uses absolutely no scientific claims nor gives any reason why the product should work.
Their only claim is that more users than not claim that their hair appears fuller. That's it. That's all.
My opinion is that people use it for a while, don't get a haircut, and, miraculously, HAVE MORE HAIR! WOW! People are inherently suggestible.
I believe that we are hardwired to take people's word. As an early species, if we didn't listen to our parents saying, "Don't go in the woods- there is a bear there," we'd probably be dead. I think we are genetically predisposed to believe claims, rather than not.
For instance, watch the episode of Penn & Teller BS! On alternative medicine, where they stick magnets on oven mitts, put snails on people's faces, play kazoos, and use plungers on people, and all of the people were convinced that they "felt better," had "less anxiety," "relieved pain," etc... I think it is marketing genius: slippery, vague verbiage on the bottle, snake oil for the masses under the guise of the fallacies of "appeal to authority" and "bandwagon. " Or maybe I am just angry that my hair is thinning, LOL!
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I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.