Embracing the Bald

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  • BooBee
    BooBee Member Posts: 860
    edited July 2009
  • ktym
    ktym Member Posts: 2,637
    edited July 2009

    I agree with Renee.  This deserves a bump now and then.  It was so helpful for me when going through chemo and the awkward fuzzy stage.  I hated my wig and how it made me feel.  So freeing and felt more in control going bald.  Good luck and hugs to any of you going through that stage now and needing this

  • Jaimieh
    Jaimieh Member Posts: 2,373
    edited July 2009

    I got brave enough about 2 months ago to ditch the wig but for the last 4-5 weeks since chemo ended my hair piece (aka..Ronald) has been seeing less and less use.  I am now embrassing the bald but with a cap and my 5 o'clock shadow.  I do get some looks and some double takes but I just make sure if I notice the person I look at them and smile and normally they return the smile. 

  • threegirlsmom
    threegirlsmom Member Posts: 56
    edited July 2009
    love..love..LOVE this post!  I, too, wanted to be the early detection poster child, sticking out like a sore thumb so people would talk to me!  Great coversation piece Tongue out.  I had my last radiation treatment the end of February..that makes me four and a half months out and my hair is now AWESOME!!  Like an inch and a half long and THICK!!!  I have decided it is God's gift to me for enduring what I had to go through...THANK YOU GOD!  It has grown like crazy and is the cutest curly stuff I ever did see!!!  I too was a NEKKID head almost all the way through.  It was cold but I was proud!!! 
  • CaliforniaCloud
    CaliforniaCloud Member Posts: 160
    edited August 2009

    I wonder how many of you ladies find yourself rubbing your head just because you like the feel of smooth, soft skin.  For months, when at home relaxing, I would leisurely rub my head.  Now my hair is slowly growing back and I actually miss rubbing my baldhead!

    I must admit that the re-growth phase makes me uncomfortable, but I, like Jaimieh, just return the look with a friendly smile.  I worried about the unattractiveness of sparse dark hair growing randomly on my baldhead, but I never imagined the new school term would present me with horrified looks from the children; after all, they saw me go bald.

    These past two weeks have been a real challenge for me when walking about the campus.  The stares from the children make me want to dive into a row of shrubs, but I straighten up, shoulders back, head held high, and give the children a hearty greeting.  All the while, I am imagining that I have a head of lovely, short, dark curls.  You know, a real "fake it till you make it--er, grow it" moment!  In fact, I have imagined my lovely, short, dark curls so often that I am often surprised not to see them when I look into the mirror!  

    I may always question certain aspects of my breast cancer experience, but deciding to embrace being bald is NOT one of them.  At age 51, I had gorgeous, long brown hair.  I was heartbroken that I would lose my hair, but I took matters into my own hands: I cut my hair short, shorter, shaved it, and then used a lint roller to remove the stubble.  I tried to wear hats, scarves, and a wig, but I didn't feel comfortable.  In the end, I wore a head covering when my head was cold or I was out in the sun.  I wasn't trying to make a statement; I simply allowed myself the gift of being true to myself--it is a gift I will always cherish. 

    Cheers!

    Cloud

  • BooBee
    BooBee Member Posts: 860
    edited August 2009

    Cloud...I felt the same way when my hair started to grow back.  I loved rubbing my soft bald head.  It was like a blanky to me.  Don't get me wrong, I'm happy to have some hair back. 

    I'm also glad that I went topless.  I met some of the most amazing people effected by cancer.  If I hid it I would never have had the pleasure.  If it made others uncomfortable or shocked them then maybe they will pay attention to there bodies and realize that cancer happens. 

    No one ever made me feel bad or uncomfortable.

  • BooBee
    BooBee Member Posts: 860
    edited October 2009
  • CaliforniaCloud
    CaliforniaCloud Member Posts: 160
    edited December 2009

    Hello Ladies,

    I finally updated my avatar to include hair!  My husband likes his hair cut very short and as of this week, my hair is finally longer than his!  WooHoo!  I am looking forward to a styling cut just before Christmas.

    Cheers!

    Cloud

  • EleanorJ
    EleanorJ Member Posts: 752
    edited December 2009

    WooHoo! At some point, I cut my boys & hubby's hair so that mine would finally be the longest hair in the house! Looking great cloud, just in time for Christmas :) How do the kids at school like the new hair?

  • CaliforniaCloud
    CaliforniaCloud Member Posts: 160
    edited December 2009

    How sweet of you to ask, Caroline.  The kids love to tell me " Ms. S your hair is growing!"  Because I am a tutor, I am always walking all over the campus and into various classrooms.  I am not sure that the teachers are wild about the kids shouting out to me when they are supposed to be quiet in line, but I always make a big deal about.  I stop, look directly at them, rub the top of my head in a clockwise motion, and say "I know!  Isn't it great!!"  

    Speaking of great, I saw your avatar the other day, and oh my, you look adorable!  I hope you and your family have a wonderful holiday season.

    Cheers!

    Cloud

  • EleanorJ
    EleanorJ Member Posts: 752
    edited December 2009

    Cloud, that's great with the kids, sounds like a sweet bunch. We're having a great Christmas time this year. So different from last year, I lost my hair 4 days before Christmas last year! What a ride! I still haven't build the guts to have my first hair cut, I'm holding on every hair I have. About 3 inches by now but still so short. I'm sure a stylist could make it look better for me but it implies cutting! LOL!

  • CaliforniaCloud
    CaliforniaCloud Member Posts: 160
    edited December 2009

    I think if I had known how losing my hair would turn out, I would have opted to keep my head shaved until I had a head full of growing, pigmented, hair follicles.  Then when I finally decided to let it grow, I would have been sporting a full head of new hair stubble!  I felt the most vulnerable during the re-growth phase--it was indeed a character building experience for me.

    I have posted this before, and here it is again, allowing myself the freedom to be comfortable without the worry of headcoverings or other people's reactions made losing my hair an enjoyable, yes, enjoyable experience.

    As I post this, winter is just weeks away so some of you may not want to go without a headcovering because of the cold, but for any of you in warmer weather climates, please, do not concern yourself with the reaction of others.  And, if you are woman without a great looking head, (mine was fine from the front, but pretty funky from the back) just look around at differing shapes of shaven heads on men--they shave their heads by choice! 

    This topic gave me the permission and courage to follow my heart and go bald.  During cancer therapy we need to be as happy and comfortable as we can be.  If for you that means embracing the bald, then go for it.

    Cheers!

    Cloud

  • EleanorJ
    EleanorJ Member Posts: 752
    edited December 2009

    I did keep my head shaved until it was real hair growing. The fuzz was driving me nuts and I was much happier bald than with a funky fuzzy head. The biggest mistake I made was letting my MIL talk me into dying my hair. On my last day of radiation, she took me to the hair salon to get it dyed and I picked a HORRIBLE color, the hair dresser didn't even try to talk me out of it and I got out of there miserable on one the most wonderful day of my life. We went to the Relay for life that very same night and I refused to take the baseball cap off my head! LOL! I was more self-conscious with this bad dye job then my before very short gray hair!

  • PauldingMom
    PauldingMom Member Posts: 927
    edited January 2010

    Okay ladies, I've got in a bad case of in between hair. I'm thrilled that it is coming back in pretty full but don't have a clue what to do with it. It's about 1 1/2 inches tall. If I comb it down it looks like a bad mans hair do. If I spike it up, well it just looks like I cut it that way on purpose. Any ideas on what to do with it. I'm just about at the point of going topless but it's been so dang cold here it's not comfortable that way. It starting to pop out from under my wig and looks goofy. It also allows my wig to slip around a bit more too. Ugh! I need something cute and quick!

  • CaliforniaCloud
    CaliforniaCloud Member Posts: 160
    edited January 2010

    Paulding Mom - I am of absolutely no help.  I went for my second cut/trim at SuperCuts just after Christmas and I am now sporting an incredibly BAD haircut. Today one of my third graders couldn't stop giggling.  I told her I got a haircut and she asked, "but why does it look so fuzzy?"  I told her I had the same question!

    I also want to know why my eyelashes fell out again.

    Oh the mysteries of life. . .

    Good luck!

    Cloud

  • gfbaker
    gfbaker Member Posts: 173
    edited January 2010

    Cloud,

    Your lashes are going to fall out for a while. It is that they are now on the same growth cycle and shed right around the same time. I finished chemo 10/08 and it is still happening to me. Supposedly in time they will shift around the shed cycle as they used to be. One day I will get up and try to put on mascara only to find out that there are only 5 lashes to paint. I started using false lashes until mine grow back in.

    By the way, I totally was fine with my bald head. It was during summer so it felt nice, and walked around my neighborhood nary a scarf. Though in Oregon it is pretty easy to do.

    Gayle

  • CaliforniaCloud
    CaliforniaCloud Member Posts: 160
    edited January 2010

    Thanks for the explanation Gayle.  It is always so much better when I understand what is "normal." 

    Oh, but wait a minute, if my eyelashes have an all or nothing cycle of falling out, what is to happen with my hair?  Recently I have been looking for hairs on my pillow and comb and I never find any.  Oh please say it isn't so with the hair on my head too!

    Cheers!

    Cloud

  • BooBee
    BooBee Member Posts: 860
    edited January 2010

    Hey ladies.....happy to hear the proud baldies taking over for me.  I met some remarkable people touched by cancer by sharing my bare noggin.  I wouldn't have it any other way....don't want to do it again....but I wouldn't change a thing.

    Best wishesWink

  • CaliforniaCloud
    CaliforniaCloud Member Posts: 160
    edited July 2015

    Oh my, what fun I had re-reading this thread. I truly loved my bald head! And, I truly loved sharing my experience of "Embracing the Bald" with such wonderful and supportive women. The experience was a gift we gave and shared with each other.

    I am now 6 years post-chemotherapy and I have chosen to keep my hair short. I love the freedom of short hair. If I find myself using a comb, then my hair is too long! However, if those adorable curls I am sporting in my avatar had remained, I would have opted for short curls. It may have been the Herceptin, but my hair remained thin until this year--so four years post-Herceptin my hair was thin. My hairdresser is amazed at the growth this year!

    For those of you lovely ladies wondering about "Embracing the Bald," do not shy away from it if your reasoning is for the goodwill of others. If going without head coverings is true for you, I promise you will find both the courage and joy to experience this part of your cancer journey on your own terms.

    Cheers to Us All!

    Cloud

  • Meadow
    Meadow Member Posts: 2,007
    edited July 2015

    Cloud, I just saw this thread and I am so glad you popped in and bumped it up. I too loved being bald....I always had "big" hair and now like you said...if I need a comb Im headed for a haircut. Freedom! I am happy for your good health. Hugs to you!


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