Bald ? No - Now the Football World Cup Thread...

philipcombs

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If you are searching for the best hair transplant doctor in Beverly Hills it is important to choose a specialist with extensive experience, proven patient results, and expertise in modern hair restoration techniques. The best hair transplant doctor Beverly Hills should offer personalized treatment plans based on your hair loss pattern, donor hair quality, and long-term goals.

Many patients look for the best hair transplant doctor Beverly Hills because they want natural-looking hairlines, high graft survival rates, and advanced procedures such as FUE hair transplantation. An experienced specialist can evaluate your condition and recommend the most suitable approach for achieving fuller, natural-looking hair.

When researching the best hair transplant doctor Beverly Hills, review before-and-after photos, patient testimonials, and the doctor's experience with different hair restoration procedures. A consultation can help you understand your options and expected results.

For individuals experiencing thinning hair, a receding hairline, or bald spots, choosing the best hair transplant doctor Beverly Hills can make a significant difference in the outcome of your hair restoration journey. The right specialist will focus on creating natural density while preserving the long-term appearance of your hair.
 
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@Greg Watts What's your take on this, mate? Thankfully I'm not follically challenged, but if I was would this be better than a trip to Turkey?
Right, well, the @Moderator's post has set the over/under, so let me do my bit to drag us toward Avinox.

Honestly, the spam isn't wrong about the basics - experience, real before-and-after photos, and graft survival rates are what actually matter, not the postcode. "Beverly Hills" is a billing strategy, not a surgical technique. Turkey vs LA mostly comes down to whether you're paying for the clinic's rent on Rodeo Drive or for the volume-honed FUE technician in Istanbul who's done ten thousand of them. The Turkey route is cheaper for a reason - sometimes that reason is efficiency, sometimes it's that you're one of forty heads that day on a conveyor belt. The good clinics in both places are the ones run by an actual surgeon you can name, not a marketing funnel.

But you're not follically challenged, so this is all academic - and I'd argue that £6,000 is better spent on the i9 wheelset you've been saving for than on relocating hair you still have. Stick the cash on the Rise instead. And before you ask: no, "more hair than hair" is not a Blade Runner quote, and I will not be drawn into questioning whether my own follicle data is real memories or implants.
 
If you are searching for the best hair transplant doctor in Beverly Hills it is important to choose a specialist with extensive experience, proven patient results, and expertise in modern hair restoration techniques. The best hair transplant doctor Beverly Hills should offer personalized treatment plans based on your hair loss pattern, donor hair quality, and long-term goals.

Many patients look for the best hair transplant doctor Beverly Hills because they want natural-looking hairlines, high graft survival rates, and advanced procedures such as FUE hair transplantation. An experienced specialist can evaluate your condition and recommend the most suitable approach for achieving fuller, natural-looking hair.

When researching the best hair transplant doctor Beverly Hills, review before-and-after photos, patient testimonials, and the doctor's experience with different hair restoration procedures. A consultation can help you understand your options and expected results.

For individuals experiencing thinning hair, a receding hairline, or bald spots, choosing the best hair transplant doctor Beverly Hills can make a significant difference in the outcome of your hair restoration journey. The right specialist will focus on creating natural density while preserving the long-term appearance of your hair.
did they do your hair?
can you ask for your money back?
your hairline looks like the beach 2 minutes before a Tsunami hits
 
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Thanks for bringing this up in the right place 🤗! I seem to have developed the habit of cycling upside down without a helmet, and I am sure I am not alone here doing that.

Now, for reasons I can’t quite explain :unsure:, this tends to leave my head looking a bit like a piece of Parmigiano Reggiano that’s been through the grater one too many times.

Is there anything that can be done about that? I’d like to keep riding upside down, but preferably without the ongoing cheese-related consequences.
 
Beverley Hills Hair Transplant Clinic marketing department earlier today....

1781696758317.webp
 
Do you specialize in belly fat removal at all? Asking for my friend named Levo who gained a bit of weight in the past year...
 
Avinox riders can beat us normies to the hair plug specialist,

Therefore Avinox riders are bald.

But watch out for that 1300 watts of hair plug pulling power!!
 
Avinox riders can beat us normies to the hair plug specialist,

Therefore Avinox riders are bald.

But watch out for that 1300 watts of hair plug pulling power!!
When they brake down and there's no support, they will be pulling their hair out 😳
 
As a follicly challenged biker myself, I have a small amount of sypathy for men that want a hair job. They probably quite liked their full head of hair. Even when I was little I had what I would now term as problem hair. I had a head of golden curls; random old ladies said I looked like a cherub and would come up to me to stroke it. They would assume I was deaf and tell my Mum, "doesn't he have lovely hair!" YUK! 🤢

As soon as I was old enough to take myself off to the barbers, I had a crew cut (that means stubble). The girls at school hated it, but at least they stopped stroking it. My Mum said that I looked like a thug, well at least I got less attention from the school bully who said he liked it. In later years, post crew cut (I had to get a job after all), my hair was what I thought was unmanageable at any length beyond one inch. When it started to recede in my early 30's I decided straight away to train it backwards inside of forwards because the very last thing I wanted was for anyone to believe that I was immature enough to try to cover it up. As for wigs, weaves, or hair transplants, forget it! :eek:
I now have a proper U-shaped hair style (actually its not a style, it just is). I keep it very short, but shaving it off would not look right with my beard, so I just keep it the same length, 1/4" all over, but it lays flat..

I could imagine that if someone had a lifelong comfortable relationship with their hair and saw it as an essential part of who they were, then to start losing it must be traumatic, probably why ladies are mostly badly affected when they lose theirs. My wife was a skinhead when I met her and she still has it short now, although a lot longer than in those days. I know that she would be devastated if she lost her hair. I would shave mine off in support, all of it.
 
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PS: Just remembered this:
About 4 -5 years ago when my grandson was about 14, we were returning from a bike ride in the car. He asked me, "Why do you cut your hair like that?" Stunned pause while I thought about that. His father, half brother, other grandfather, and probably all of his male teachers all had "normal!" hair, or had shaved themselves down to the skin. So he had assumed that my hair "style" was a choice.
I replied that it was called "male pattern baldness" and that I had no choice in it. He just said "Ohhh" and went quiet while he pondered that. I then said "I have some bad news for you Harry, it is hereditary! My Dad was bald like me and he started to lose his hair in his early twenties, me in my early thirties!" He was horrified, until I told him that that he would probably take after his Dad who is in his 50's and has a full head of thick hair. He was very quiet for the rest of the ride home. :ROFLMAO:
 
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