You can straighten it, flip it, place it high in a bun or tie it back into a  ponytail. Dealing with your hair can be a pain when frizz rears its ugly head in  all the wrong places and on all the wrong days. Some people can attest to having  a love-hate relationship with their hair because of all they may have to go  through to keep it in tip top shape. Going through bad hair days can leave some  people with their panties in a bunch. Bad hair days may also leave some with the  aching desire to just shave it all off! Hair can really test our patience during  the times when we experience hair loss or when that annoying section of hair  just refuses to lay flat. These feelings have targeted the best of us including  celebrities and others who may seem as if they've possess hair that can do no  wrong. Plenty of celebs have admitted to having bad hair days. These include  supermodel Naomi Campbell, Sofia Vergara and music artist, Pink. What is it with  hair? At times our hair can work for us and at other times against us. No matter  how terrible you think your hair is, there's always someone out there who wishes  that they had hair like yours. They just may not admit it!
So, what makes hair become magical? What are the secrets for achieving and  displaying the perfect set of strands? Do they lie in the glitziest and most  glamorous salon that money can buy? Can those secrets be found in products that  claim to have every hair-pleasing ingredient known to man? Gels, pomades,  smoothing agents and anti-frizz products can only do but so much to the texture  of our hair. If you're like the average brainiac, then you've probably wondered  if genes play a role in the way your hair looks and feels. Jeremy Nathans,  professor of molecular biology and genetics at Johns Hopkins University School  of Medicine, has confirmed that genes actually do play a role in the pattern and  variance of hair. Nathans further explained this fact when he stated: "It seems  that in many cases, unusual and distinctive hair patterns may owe more to our  inheritance than to any environmental factors."
If you're looking to cast blame on something for your most recent bad hair  day, you may want to become familiar with a certain type of gene in the body.  Scientists have recently discovered a gene called 'Frizzled 6' (Fz6) which  determines how frizzy a person's hair will be. Fz6 is the name of the gene that  is accountable for an individual's hair pattern or lack thereof. It's the gene  that's responsible for the bizarre waves, dips and quiffs of hair that you  constantly obsess over. Instead of charging it to the notion that your hair has  a mind of its own, understand that there are little units of heredity called  genes that are actually running the show behind the scenes. There are some  issues in life that are just not worth stressing over. Wild hair follicles are  certainly in that number! The next time you feel perturbed about your hum-drum  hairstyle realize that there are millions of people who also feel the same way  about their hair. To put it simply, hair is just hair; it doesn't define who you  are.


 
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