The $3 Rinse That Thickened Her Thinning Hair - Big Beauty Sells It Back to Black Women for $40

This video is about rice water for hair growth for Black women, the cheap rinse that thickened thinning hair for women who never paid a beauty company a dime for it. Rice water is nothing more than the cloudy water left over from soaking or cooking plain white rice, and women in southern China and old Japan have used it for hundreds of years to keep their hair thick, long, and dark well into old age. This one is for Black women watching their crown thin and their edges go sparse, who have been handed one expensive fix after another that never held. You will hear exactly how to make a rice water rinse at home for about three dollars, how to ferment it the stronger way, how often to use it, and the one make-or-break step that decides whether rice water thickens your hair or dries it out and snaps it off. That step is why some Black women say rice water for thinning hair did not work for them, and it is the part no forty-dollar bottle will tell you. You will also hear who took this free rinse, bottled it, stamped the word growth on the label, and sold it back to Black women at a steep markup, while the aisle made for our hair never carried it at all. If you are a Black woman who wants real hair growth without funding the people who buried this, rice water belongs in your kitchen. Subscribe and stay in this circle of Black women who kept the real ways. Sources: The Yao women of Huangluo, Longsheng County, Guangxi, China. A community widely documented for floor-length hair kept dark into old age, traditionally credited to a fermented rice water rinse. Heian-period Japan (roughly 794 to 1185). Court women cared for floor-length hair using rice water rinses, a practice recorded among the era's beauty customs.