The season your hair starts growing back.
Everyone talks about hair loss. Nobody prepares you for what comes after — the slow, uncertain, beautiful work of recovery.
The absence gets all the attention. The return deserves a map.
The Biology
Your follicle isn't growing hair. It's deciding whether to.
There is an entire conversation that the hair loss industry refuses to have. It talks constantly about the falling — the drain, the pillow, the brush — and almost never about what comes after. What regrowth actually looks and feels like. How long it takes. Why it seems to pause just when you thought it was finally working.
This post is for the season after the falling stops. The season you're probably in right now, or approaching, without anyone having told you what to expect.
Every hair follicle operates on a cycle: anagen (active growth), catagen (transition), telogen (rest), and exogen (shedding). When stress, hormonal disruption, nutritional deficiency, or inflammation pushed your follicles into premature telogen, they didn't die. They went quiet. That distinction matters more than almost anything else in hair recovery.
When the conditions that caused the shift begin to change — when cortisol drops, when circulation improves, when the right botanicals reach the follicle consistently — the follicle doesn't immediately spring back into anagen. It assesses. It waits for confirmation that the environment is genuinely safe. It runs a kind of biological audit of the signals arriving at the dermal papilla before committing resources to a new hair shaft.
This is why regrowth feels inconsistent at first. It's not inconsistent. It's cautious. The follicle is right to be cautious — it's been through something.
The Recovery Arc
What's actually happening — week by week.
wks
The invisible window
Nothing you can see is happening. This is the most discouraging phase because it looks like nothing is working. It's actually the most important one. The follicle is re-entering late telogen before transitioning to anagen. Blood supply is rebuilding. The dermal papilla cells are receiving new signals. Trust the process even when it's invisible.
wks
The baby hairs arrive
Fine, short hairs appear — usually first at the temples and hairline, then at the crown. They may be lighter in colour than your existing hair. They will be fragile. Do not brush aggressively over them. Do not tie hair tightly. These are anagen hairs in the very early growth phase, still building structural proteins in their shaft. They are a genuine signal, not a false start. Protect them.
mos
The patchy middle
Regrowth will not be uniform. Some areas respond faster than others based on their local blood supply and follicular density. Do not interpret uneven regrowth as failure — interpret it as the body prioritising. The slower zones will follow. The scalp massage you're doing every morning is specifically addressing the areas of lower circulation.
mos
The visible return
By month six, strands are long enough to blend with existing hair. By month nine, diameter increases become perceptible — hair that once felt fine starts to feel substantive in your hand. This is where the ritual you've built pays its fullest dividend. Every day of consistent oil massage, every 90-second shampoo hold, every botanical that reached the follicle — it's all in this hair.
Good signs recovery is progressing: baby hairs at the hairline (especially temples), reduced daily shed count, scalp that feels less tight, itching or tingling at the crown (increased circulation), hair that feels different in texture — more alive — even before length returns.
Signs to watch: shedding that restarts suddenly after appearing to slow (usually a stress or hormonal event), patches that remain completely inactive past month four (consider a dermatologist visit to rule out alopecia areata), hair that grows and breaks repeatedly before reaching chin length (a protein/nutrition signal).
The Purple Cow
The hair loss industry sells products. Nobody sells patience with a map.
Here is the truth that makes Laritelle different from every other brand talking about hair recovery: we are not trying to rush your follicles. We are trying to create the conditions in which your follicles choose to grow — and then we're asking you to trust a process that works on biological time, not the time you wish it worked on.
Six months feels like a long time. It is. It's also exactly how long it takes for a healthy anagen hair to grow from invisible to approximately 3 inches. There is no formulation in the world that changes the biology of the hair cycle. What changes is whether that cycle is running or stalled — whether your follicles are in the growth phase or the rest phase. That is what our work is about. Getting you into growth. Keeping you there.
The season your hair starts growing back is not dramatic. It doesn't announce itself. It arrives in small, quiet increments — a baby hair you notice one Tuesday morning, a braid that feels slightly thicker, a brush that comes away with less. It is the most hopeful season. It deserves to be understood.
It's a direction.
Ready to start your recovery season?
Every product in the Fertile Roots collection is formulated for the long arc — not the quick fix.
→ Explore the Fertile Roots CollectionScience, ritual, and botanical intelligence — delivered daily.
Each morning, one article. New research, ancient wisdom, and the honest science of hair and scalp health. Written for women who want to understand what is happening — not just what to buy.
By subscribing you agree to receive email from Laritelle Organic. Unsubscribe at any time.
FREE Shipping on all US Orders