Hello everybody,
I was diagnosed (well, simply told) that I have alopecia areatra about two weeks ago. A bald patch, about the size of two small match boxes, had appeared on the back of my scalp. I'd noticed lots of hair falling out about three days before some friends spotted the patch. Luckily it was at the back and my hair's long enough to cover it.
My friends, trying to reassure me I suppose, brushed it off as 'just a small patch'. I laughed about it in pubic, but later on in private was distraught, and terrified that I'd wake in a few more days to find it all gone.
I found this site and read loads of really inspiring things - and then I thought I have no right to be here or feel sorry for myself, as mine is just a small patch, while some of you guys have lost all your hair.
So I pulled myself together and tried to forget about it. I told my friends and family it was growing back and they said, see, we told you it wasn't serious.
However, two weeks on, it's expanding. The same patch, just slowly getting bigger and bigger. I can hide it if I style my hair in a low ponytail. Will it carry on falling out, will it stop, who knows... the general opinion from anybody with experience of alopecia, and medical knowledge, seems to be that noboy can tell you - it's unpredictable.
I just don't know - at what point am I allowed, or meant, to freak out/buy a headscarf/tell people/go back to the doctor - anything????
I know that sounds odd, but I think at the moment, I'm half in denial, half distraught, but feel an immense pressure to 'be positive' and pretend it's not that big a deal, for the sake of everybody else.
And I will be positive, when it comes to it, I always will. But I just wish this wasn't happening. I've had a lot of bad luck over the past couple of years (a lot of good luck too), some people have suggested it was triggered by post traumatic stress. Seems so cruel though... go through a trauma and then be doubly punished by losing your hair??!?!??!
I'd really appreciate your feedback, about how you found the 'early days' of alopecia, and how your experience panned out...
Thanks for reading