2-year-old girl can’t brush her hair due to a rare disease

A charming shaggy girl named Phoebe Brasuel doesn’t know what a hairbrush is. Due to a rare genetic disorder, she belongs to a small category of people whose hair is so different from normal that it is easier to leave it alone than to try to somehow fix it.

The girl, and she is still 21 months old, does not yet realize her uniqueness, but her mother is having a hard time – there will always be a mischief who will reproach that she does not follow her daughter, completely not understanding the essence of what is happening.

Phoebe’s mom says she’s tried dozens of different products in an attempt to gently and painlessly bring her daughter’s hair back into some semblance of order. To no avail.The girl wakes up and her head is on end, which, although it looks charming, is still somewhat discouraging.

Now she is small and does not attach any importance to this, but what will happen when the age-old girlish craving for beauty overcomes? It’s one thing to be like a cartoon character as a child, and quite another to live with it all your life.

For the first time, mom realized that something was wrong with her daughter’s hair when she was three months old. Then it turned out that Phoebe had the same, strange and unpleasant, “uncombable hair syndrome.” Instead of a round shape, her hairs are triangular, they have a jagged surface and are strongly twisted – combing this is like wading through a dense forest thicket.

Power methods just lead to terrible pain, so it’s easiest to do what Phoebe’s mom figured out. She clings to her daughter a bow or a hairpin and everyone thinks that this is the author’s hairstyle.

It is unrealistic to cure or eliminate this syndrome; moreover, doctors are not at all sure that it is worth doing. It is likely that with age, Phoebe’s hair will change and become more “compliant.” Well, if not, no big deal. The great scientist is an example of this.

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