Boondock
Senior Member
- Reaction score
- 13
This is just a post on my general outlook on future treatments, which I believe is the most effective and safe way to approach this topic.
I base my view on two premises:
1. We have no idea as of yet whether any future treatments will solve the hair loss problem in the way we need them to.
2. If treatments do come forward, they may not arrive in the timeframe most of us want, and there are strong grounds to be sceptical about 3-5 year claims.
I also think there are modest dangers in going too far down the 'future treatments' line of thought. It makes you plan your future on assumptions that may not happen. It also makes you focus even more on the hair loss problem, since you're continually 'waiting' for something to come along. There are users here who've even based their decisions to get a dubious hair transplant on the assumption that, by the time it looks too odd, they'll be able get HM to cover up the damage.
Therefore, my outlook is to act 'as if' they'll never happen. This is an outlook that lets you focus on what we have now, and therefore avoid making present decisions on future assumptions that may be incorrect. It also allows you to drop cornucupian, wishful thinking, and to get on with your life without having to be transfixed on this future miracle - which some people here are almost putting their life on hold for.
If treatment does come out, fantastic. I'll be the first to jump on the flight to get it. But if it doesn't, this form of pragmatic pessimism at least means I don't get burned.
I base my view on two premises:
1. We have no idea as of yet whether any future treatments will solve the hair loss problem in the way we need them to.
2. If treatments do come forward, they may not arrive in the timeframe most of us want, and there are strong grounds to be sceptical about 3-5 year claims.
I also think there are modest dangers in going too far down the 'future treatments' line of thought. It makes you plan your future on assumptions that may not happen. It also makes you focus even more on the hair loss problem, since you're continually 'waiting' for something to come along. There are users here who've even based their decisions to get a dubious hair transplant on the assumption that, by the time it looks too odd, they'll be able get HM to cover up the damage.
Therefore, my outlook is to act 'as if' they'll never happen. This is an outlook that lets you focus on what we have now, and therefore avoid making present decisions on future assumptions that may be incorrect. It also allows you to drop cornucupian, wishful thinking, and to get on with your life without having to be transfixed on this future miracle - which some people here are almost putting their life on hold for.
If treatment does come out, fantastic. I'll be the first to jump on the flight to get it. But if it doesn't, this form of pragmatic pessimism at least means I don't get burned.
