How To Protect Your Hair While Diving

Keeping Your Hair Healthy Regardless Of Chlorine
So the day is beautiful. It’s not too hot, it’s not too cold, it’s not too dry, and you feel like taking a dive in the cool blue depths of the crystal-clear ocean. But you’ve just got your hair set perfectly, and you know the water is going to totally undo all the work you put into your “style”, leaving your hair feeling frizzy and brittle. What’s the solution?

Well, there are a couple of ways to go about this. One, you could wear a swim cap and just shove all your hair under there before either diving off the board or donning your scuba gear (depending on the sort of diving you’re doing). This can work, but it’s going to “crunch” your hair, and it won’t be too comfortable. 

Another option might involve using a product in your hair to “set” it. But if you’re diving, and your hair remains “set”, that is some intense product you’ve used. It’s probably not good for you.

A third option might involve using plastic bound by an elastic band to keep the water form touching your hair altogether–that’s still not too convenient, though, and there are better options. Ideally, you just let your hair flow behind you in the water, right? How can you “have your cake and eat it, too”, as the saying goes, with diving and healthy hair?

Your Skin And Your Hair
If your skin is too thin, that’s also going to affect your hair. Thin, weak, unhealthy skin makes it easy for hair to be pulled from your scalp—even when swimming; though it’s more likely to happen after you leave the water. Your hairs become more light, skinny, and “frizzy”. It will wrap around itself and the tension can pull it from your head. 

To find the best balance before using product, What makes sense is getting your body into fullest health—this extend to hair naturally. Getting skin healthy will help your hair be healthy, as it extends from the dermal layer. 

When it comes to solid skin care products, argan oil is probably the best natural substance out there to help keep yours healthy and smooth. Additionally, it can be used on hair in a supplemental form that simultaneously helps you keep it looking at its best even after the deepest dives in the saltiest waters. 

With healthier skin, you’ll have more full hair with better body, bounce, and consistency. However, the healthiest hair can still be mangled by shifting currents and the rubber straps of scuba masks or other related equipment. Braids can help, as can a properly taut ponytail. Another option may be a haircut.

If your hair isn’t all that long, then what the water does to it won’t matter much; you can set it right by running your hand through it a few times after you pull yourself back onto the boat, or from the pool. Still, it’s nicer to have very long hair, and here also is another considerable solution.

Healthier, More Manageable Hair
When you’re healthy enough to grow long hair, even the shortest fronds can be carefully bound in braids or a ponytail, and the weight of the whole will keep the majority of strands from coming loose even in “thick” or “mineral rich” waters. 

These can even be good for you; but not always. It’s a good idea to wash off after a deep dive in questionable water, and use some sort of health nutrient like argan oil. Still, if you’re going to have the longest, healthiest hair, you’ll need to eat right and exercise regularly—that gives you fullest flourish, and will help safeguard you in even nasty waters.

Something else that makes your hair healthy is your mind. When you’re mentally centered, this extends to your physical body. Healthy minds make it easier to pursue healthy activities. One of the biggest threats to mental health today is technology, which keeps you indoors, restricts Vitamin D, isolates you, and can lead to a reduction in the health of hair.

So to keep your hair how you like in the wild waters of the world while diving, either in scuba, free, or swimming pool capacity (where the chlorine can be quite damaging), the best way to do is to enable your hair to be at its healthiest through physical activity, eating right, properly using technology in balance, and natural supplementation. 

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