Yes. White people can get ashy. It’s called “white-coat reaction,” and it happens in the shower. That’s when our skin sheds dead skin cells just because the white stuff in the shower clogs up and becomes toxic.
While that’s a bit of a shocker, there is also a second way. When your skin is dead and you’re not getting rid of it, it becomes dehydrated. And when your skin is dehydrated by the way, your hair starts to turn ashy too, just like your skin. That means you can’t really get rid of your white hair, it just turns to ashy.
It’s a funny thing that happens to white people. You know what I’m talking about. You start getting the white-coat reaction and you stop getting rid of the dead skin cells, but when you go to wash your face or comb your hair or whatever you do, it turns the same color as the dead skin. So when you go to wash them, they turn back to normal again. The skin cells you have left are just stuck in your hair. It’s ashy.
I would imagine that white people get ashy skin because they are getting rid of all the dead skin cells that were formed in their lifetime. This is called natural aging. To counteract this, you can try to get rid of the dead skin cells with diet and exercise. To combat ashy skin though, you could try using an anti-oxidant (antioxidant) and a moisturizer.
Most folks would agree that the dead skin cells in our hair or skin is ashy. The problem is that we only see ashy skin when we are alive, not when we are dead. This is because we don’t see ashy skin or hair when we are dead, but our cells have not yet been destroyed by the lack of oxygen. You don’t feel ashy skin if you are dead because your body is still functioning.
So if I were to use an anti-oxidant and a moisturizer to combat ashy skin, would my hair start to become yellow? I would say that my hair would remain white and ashy, but I do agree that it would look ashy.
The color of our hair is actually related to our blood content. The more you breathe in, the less oxygen you have. When we are alive, the blood cells that give us life, have more oxygen circulating in them than they do when we are dead. But the blood cells that give our skin and hair their red pigmentation have very little oxygen circulating in them. So when we are dead, the oxygen in our blood cells are less than it is in our cells that give us life.
This is why people sometimes get the idea that white people should just “blend” bleach, but that’s actually the same thing that happens when we’re dead. So the question is: should you bleach your hair? If you do it right, it does look like you’ve just dyed it. If you do it wrong, it looks like you just dyed it.
Bleach is, of course, not a good idea for anyone who is dead. You should bleach your hair in the way that you would bleach a corpse, but not for anyone who is alive. The fact is that our hair grows constantly, and when we die, the oxygen we have left in our blood cells will have been consumed, leaving our skin and hair looking ashy and dead.
The best way to bleach your hair is to just let it air dry. But if you have a few short days left to go, the safest way is to bleach it in the shower. You can also bleach your hair in the shower, but it’s better to keep it in the dryer until it’s time to wash it.