yes
Waitresses should tie their hair back to prevent their naturally falling out hair from getting in customers' food.
Sure, with exceptions like Basic Combat Training, Advanced Individual Training, and so on, during which the hair is too short to part.
Its best to sleep with the hair down because having it in a ponytail causes damage and breakage to your hair from the bed sheets and pillows. However, you can tie your hair in a LOOSE bun or braid while sleeping. Drink a lot of water too.
To decrease resistence while competing in a swim race. If you think about it... Hair slows the swimmers down by a lot. Your hair is a big head of..... hair.... and your swimming, water gets trapped all through your hair slowing you down quite a bit. It's much harder for people with long hair to swim with no swim cap. Even though your hair will still get wet, it decreases the resistance while swimming.
it sometimes depend on your hair rate.and how they take care of it.and you have to make your hair breath by at least letting it down every once and a while.
You should use a round brush and flip your head upside down to get extra volume. If you want curly hair, then you should braid it while its wet and leave it like that overnight for wavy/ curly hair.
Rapunzel. Oh, and it's 'let down your hair' not let's down your hair
Your hair is not alive, there is never any blood running through it. But, doing that to your scalp will not make your hair grow faster.
Spike it up at the back when slightly damp. Do this while your head is upside down!
No bcz if you tie your hair to tight your hair will get damage so sleep with your hair down
Try blow-drying it. Use a brush and while blowdrying brush your hair straight down. Another tool that might help is shampoos and conditioners that have straightning advances. You might want to use conditioners that weigh your hair down, which will get rid of some of the unwanted body. You can also choose to go down the chemical road, and get your hair chemically straightned.
No, they get paid by the hour. You tip service industries that don't make much money otherwise, like waitresses and hair dressers and tattoo artists and other similar jobs.