Feeling good about yourself, it also involves the hairstyle

"Feeling good about yourself, it also involves the hairstyle"
The "savior" on which it is full of praise is Vijaya. After 20 years of hairdressing "classic" and expertise in wigs, she switched to the socio-hairstyle. In his living room in Sainte Genevieve des Bois in Essonne (91), it receives individual sleeping clients who have undergone partial or total loss of their hair (alopecia areata, post-chemotherapy fall, hormonal drop, ...) . An accompaniment that goes through hair care and hair prostheses but also advice on makeup or clothing for those who wish. The women with whom she intervenes but are united by a common "fragile", sometimes social or medical.

Why help them? Women who have lost their hair for example, "do not dare go in aesthetic salons because they are not comfortable." Some feel they undress when to remove their wigs, "explains Véronique . Gibault After a painful ordeal, they can easily forget their femininity "Yet they need to take care of them" This is the whole challenge Veronique tends to raise with her clients.. help them "come to terms with their image. "
"Listening"
At 47, Nathy has been slow to learn to love. Three months after the death of his father, his hair falling gradually. A dermatologist tells her that she is suffering from alopecia areata that erupted following the emotional shock. The physical change makes it a bombshell: "I did not recognize myself in the pictures before I even went through a phase where I have all withdrawn.". Impossible for her to set foot in a hair salon and confront the gaze of others. She prefers to blow drying her wig itself. This lasts three years until she walks in the door of the salon Véronique: "it made me a very foolish that we can take care of me."
In the hands of the socio-dressing, she claims to have found a listening and "Serenity" it could not have found elsewhere. "She was able to find my style. She gave me lots of solutions to prevent my wig itches, but also for washing or drying."
Little by little, Nathy learns to accept her human hair wig. And used it to totally change head: "I was blond Now before I became brown It felt good to change color..," She admits. At 47, she is a new woman who takes her two wigs, one it takes to go running and daily wig "long with a blow dry." Fear of hair salons is a distant memory, even if it remains faithful to the living room of Veronica: "Today I am very pleased to note the" appointment barber "in my diary!" she is having fun.
Advising women like Nathy, it is concluded that the mission of socio-hairdressers cap is a social aspect. Yet Véronique denies "play therapist". "I'm staying in the aesthetic part. I listen but if I see a person needs psychological support I encouraged him to reorient themselves to psychologists," she insists.
Training still little known
The socio-barber training is conducted since 2011 by the SOCO-Academy, but it is not yet recognized by a state diploma. During this specific training, candidates meet oncologists, dermatologists, psychologists, autism specialists from other practitioners. The goal: to offer their expertise capillary public hospitals, retirement homes, prisons of life Homes wheelchair friendly, detoxification centers.
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Milan Tomic

Hi. I’m Designer of Blog Magic. I’m CEO/Founder of ThemeXpose. I’m Creative Art Director, Web Designer, UI/UX Designer, Interaction Designer, Industrial Designer, Web Developer, Business Enthusiast, StartUp Enthusiast, Speaker, Writer and Photographer. Inspired to make things looks better.

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