Have you ever heard about the so-called mystical balance between protein and moisture? The idea that hair needs both, but if you accidentally use too much protein, your hair turns rough and crunchy - so you add moisture. Then, if you overdo the moisture, your hair becomes too stretchy, and suddenly you need protein again? It almost feels like an endless cycle, constantly buying new products for your bathroom shelf.

The beauty industry controls a lot of the information we see, but we often forget that their goal isn’t to educate - it’s to sell. That’s how the idea of curls having a “protein need” was born. People over-moisturized their hair, noticed it getting stretchy and limp, and blamed it on a protein deficiency - even though there’s no scientific study or book that backs up this whole protein-moisture “balance.”

If your hair feels “over-hydrated” (like stretched-out curls, low volume, or hair that feels too soft), it doesn’t automatically mean you need protein. It might just mean you’re giving your hair too much moisture. We often hear - especially through the CGM - that curly hair is always dry and needs loads of hydration. But in my experience, many curls aren't dry, they’re over-moisturized.

Remember, dry doesn’t mean parched. Curly hair is naturally drier, but that doesn’t mean you need to drench it in moisture. Frizz doesn’t always equal dryness either. It’s a normal part of curly hair, and often it can be managed with the right styling products.

So, what should you do if your hair feels too wet? 1. Don’t immediately reach for protein. Try using fewer moisturizing products - cut back on masks, creams, and leave-ins. 2. Choose lighter options, like a lightweight leave-in instead of a thick cream. 3. Use less conditioner overall. I do this myself and noticed my curls became firmer and more voluminous.

When can protein actually help? If your hair is very bleached or heat-damaged, protein can help - temporarily. It fills in damaged areas until your healthy hair grows back. But remember, no protein in a product is the same as the natural protein in healthy hair. It can’t rebuild - it just patches things up.

If your hair isn’t damaged, it doesn’t need much (or any) protein. If it’s not broken, don’t try to fix it. Protein can coat your hair and make it feel rough. That usually means either your hair didn’t need protein in the first place, or the protein was too heavy. In that case, you don’t need to “balance it out” with moisture - you just need less protein.

But what about porosity tests? Can they help me figure it out? Not really. All those tests like the “float test” (where you drop hair in water) are just another myth. A couple of strands in a glass can’t represent the condition of your whole head. Porosity is complex and would actually require lab equipment to assess. While curly hair tends to be more porous, that doesn’t automatically mean it needs more protein.

To sum it all up:

🤎 Hair feels too hydrated? Don’t add protein—just ease up on the moisture.

🤎 Damaged hair? A bit of protein might help for now, but healthy curls come from healthy hair growing back—not from patching it with protein.

🤎 Protein and moisture aren’t opposites to “balance.” They’re both conditioning agents that support your hair’s structure, elasticity, and overall health.

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