I was diagnosed last week with Androgenetic Alopecia by a doctor with the worst bedside manner I've ever come across. He basically said "You have Alopecia and you're gonna go bald, but you'll keep a ring around the back like a balding man and there's really not much you can do about it."

As you can imagine, I was mortified and walked around shell-shocked all the rest of the day. The thing is, it actually wasn't that much of a surprise diagnosis, because I have had thinning hair since I was about 17 years old which has been getting progressively worse, but I kept putting it down to pregnancies and breastfeeding (I have 3 kids aged 7, 5 and 19 months, so have basically been preggers of feeding continuously for 8 years!). For me the shock was firstly the doctor's complete lack of empathy and understanding and secondly, the realisation that I'd been counting on a magic pill that would make the hair all grow back. The story in my head had a "happily ever after" and he was telling me something quite different.

I am now, a week later, surprisingly okay with this. Maybe it's denial? But I don't think so. I have been virtually attached to my computer and reading up on this non-stop and this site has been so wonderful. What I have seen is AMAZING women who are bald and proud and surprisingly beautiful. And then there are the other women who wear the most magnificent wigs and look phenomenal. And I realise that we are not our hair. I AM NOT MY HAIR! Wow - how liberating is that!

I asked my 7 year old daughter (who is very into Disney princesses and the Little Mermaid etc - all characters with flowing locks...) what she would think if Mummy had no hair. Her response completely blew me away. Without a moment's hesitation, she said "Mum, you would look so pretty if you were bald because your hair wouldn't distract from your pretty face." WOW. And kids are honest. It made me realise that the people who love us don't love us for our hair or our eyes or our boobs or our teeth. They don't love us for our fingernails or our bums or our noses. They love us for us. We are more than our hair.

So, here's my pledge. When I get to the point when I look a bit sad and I have a ring of old-man hair around my head, I'm gonna shave it off and I hope I'll have the courage to go bald. If not, I'm gonna have fun with wigs and get to enjoy the kind of thick beautiful hair I have never had.

You are all an inspiration and I love you for making me realise that this can be turned on its head and that there is a bright, beautiful light at the end of the tunnel.

xoxo

Views: 38

Comment by Lisa Santer on March 25, 2010 at 2:00pm
india.arie has a song called "I am not my hair." Her specific social pressures about hair are different than mine now, but I like the song.
Comment by Laurie Blundell on March 25, 2010 at 4:49pm
Such an amazing testimony. You are right, this site has been very empowering to me and I just started last week! My hair loss came very quickly. I noticed it in December, and now just few months later I am basically that Old man around my head" person. My doctor said I shouldn't shave it because of the negative impact it would have on me psychologically, but it can't be worse than what I see in the mirror and in my comb every day. After reading your message, I think I am going to go for it and shave it off this weekend! Thank you for sharing.
Comment by Mary on March 25, 2010 at 5:33pm
Wonderful post, Michelle! You said it so well. With the attitude you have, I think you won't have any problem adjusting and accepting when it becomes time to shave. I thought my life would be over if I lost my hair. Then when it got to the point in these photos (taken the night before)I shaved it all off and moved on.

http://www.alopeciaworld.net/photo/night-before-shaving-it-all?cont...

Laurie, in my opinion, your doctor is wrong! As soon as I shaved, I felt much better. I felt in charge again and didn't have to keep watching the bald areas expand, didn't have to pick up the hair off the floor and cry every night. Check out my photos of the night before and this one of the day I shaved. My expression says it all:

http://www.alopeciaworld.net/photo/just-after-shaving-my-head?conte...

I haven't looked back. This is me now - healthy, and bald.
Mary
Comment by margaret staib on March 25, 2010 at 9:38pm
Michelle, I too have a daughter (three). I have been loosing my hair for four years now, kind of like chinese water torture or a hot wired car from one small spot. I am now almost bald. My seven year old looked at me about a year ago when the baldness really came through and said, "mommy, your still the mommy that I love and that loves me even if you don't have hair. It was my ah ha moment. Kids really put it in the best words that you can take to your soul. No we are not our hair. Amen. all the best to you. Margaret
Comment by Clara S. on March 25, 2010 at 9:54pm
That's so great to hear that you're feeling more positive now. This is awesome right? It's helped me so much too. And like Mary says, it feel so much better once shaved because you no longer have to watch those clumps of hair falling everywhere. It was liberating when I did it. And now, i just love my wigs and being able to change it on the go. My boyfriend told me yesterday that he's so lucky because his girlfriend can have so many different hairstyles on the go as he loves change :) And he loves me bald too! He says it accentuates my features. So yea, you should try shaving when you're ready! It took me a while..it was bit of a process to accept and come to terms with alopecia but am so happy that I've crossed that bridge.
Comment by Michelle L on March 25, 2010 at 11:53pm
Thanks for the feedback - so happy that everyone is so supportive of one another. A question for those brave women who go out bald - what kind of response do you get? When you first shaved, how did your friends / colleagues etc react?
xoxo
Comment by Mary on March 26, 2010 at 1:21am
I get almost 100% positive responses. Yes, women who've had cancer assume I have cancer, and they ask. But, you know what? It doesn't bother me anymore. It just makes me feel fortunate that ALL I have is AA. My friends were uniformly supportive. My students in my weekly dance class were great. It seems like everyone got used to this "new me" very quickly and it just hasn't been as big a deal as I thought it would be.
Comment by Lisa Santer on March 26, 2010 at 6:40am
The transitional times are the hardest for me. Shaving->relief, without exception. No more obsessively checking for bald spots in every reflective surface, or shed hairs on the pillow or shower. People adjust, usually very quickly--my scalp's not actually the center of the universe ; ) Almost always, if I'm relaxed and confident, other people relax about it. For some people, my head does serve as a projection screen--they see what's in their heads, whether it's cancer, a Buddhist monk, self-mutilation, or whatever. My relaxed attitude lets the people who care about me ask and find out what's in and on my head.

Over the decades, I have heard a lot of women's cancer stories. On days I don't feel like dealing with strangers' stuff (or I'm cold), I just cover with a scarf or hat.
Comment by Mary on March 26, 2010 at 9:47am
Wise words, Lisa. I also find that my attitude is reflected in the attitudes of people around me.
Comment by Adrian Coe on March 29, 2010 at 5:52am
Brilliant comments.....so much more in life to worry about...given the choice of beautiful healthy kids or alopecia,,,, give me alopecia any time! keep safe x

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