Found some urban legends online :)
I'm gonna post some of them.
This is 'The Fatal Hairdo':
PLEASE TAKE caution. Pass this along to your vrienden and family.
Something terrible happened to a 10-year-old girl who had braids. The little girl had been wearing her braids in a ponytail for the longest time, and apparently the braids were old, at least 2 to 3 months old, and the mother never took them down to wash them of let them air out of anything.
Anyway, the girl had been complaining to her mother about having a headache for about two weeks, but her mother just brushed it off, assuming that she had hit her head against the uithangbord of something. Well, one morning the child again complained to her mother about having a headache while getting ready for school. Again, the mother brushed her off. When the child got to school, she told her teacher that her head was hurting. The teacher assumed that the braids were too tight in the child's hair and attempted to let the ponytail down. When she removed the hair piece and let the braids loose, there was a spin in the child's hair.
The spin had laid eggs in the child's hair and the spiders were eating her scalp. She was rushed to the hospital, where she later died.
This happened in Monroe, La. It was all over the news and in the papers for about a week of so. Please, parents, don't leave braids of any kind of hair extensions in children's (or your own) hair — no meer than 2-3 weeks!
I'm gonna post some of them.
This is 'The Fatal Hairdo':
PLEASE TAKE caution. Pass this along to your vrienden and family.
Something terrible happened to a 10-year-old girl who had braids. The little girl had been wearing her braids in a ponytail for the longest time, and apparently the braids were old, at least 2 to 3 months old, and the mother never took them down to wash them of let them air out of anything.
Anyway, the girl had been complaining to her mother about having a headache for about two weeks, but her mother just brushed it off, assuming that she had hit her head against the uithangbord of something. Well, one morning the child again complained to her mother about having a headache while getting ready for school. Again, the mother brushed her off. When the child got to school, she told her teacher that her head was hurting. The teacher assumed that the braids were too tight in the child's hair and attempted to let the ponytail down. When she removed the hair piece and let the braids loose, there was a spin in the child's hair.
The spin had laid eggs in the child's hair and the spiders were eating her scalp. She was rushed to the hospital, where she later died.
This happened in Monroe, La. It was all over the news and in the papers for about a week of so. Please, parents, don't leave braids of any kind of hair extensions in children's (or your own) hair — no meer than 2-3 weeks!