The Chemo Paradox & The Death of My Hair
The Great Hair Escape: A Chemo Horror Comedy
Well,
folks, it happened. The hair exodus is in full swing, and I have officially
lost control of the situation. My body feels great—energy’s high, GI is
on track, and my appetite is back. Everything is working… except my appearance.
My face and hair are screaming for help.
It Started with a Pluck
The
first sign of trouble? It no longer hurt to pluck my face hairs. A normal
person might think, Oh, nice! But me? I knew better. When your follicles
stop fighting, they’re getting ready to surrender. And surrender they did.
Before
we get into that, let’s talk about the rogue hairs that sneak up on us
with age.
At
23, I worked with a woman who I swore was pushing 60. In reality, she
was probably my age now. She had the stern, judgmental presence of a librarian
and a collection of whiskers on her chin and lip that I could not unsee. Now,
I’m not a judgmental person—young me would have felt horrible thinking
such things. But this woman was mean, and if karma wanted to gift her with
rogue facial hair, who was I to argue?
Then
there was my cousin. Mid-conversation, bam—there they were. Dark, coarse
chin hairs living their best lives. My inner monologue went full - What.
The. Hell.
And
let’s not forget my dry cleaner boss from college, an exceedingly
inappropriate man, who casually dropped: “Women get areola hairs.”
AREOLA. HAIRS. A concept I was not prepared to process at 19.
Fast
forward to now: those same rogue chin hairs have arrived. A few sneaky ones on
my upper lip. And yes, I’ll say it—on my nipples. That pervy dry cleaner boss
was right (I hate that he was right). But plot twist: chemo took them out
first. My chin hasn’t been this smooth since my 20s. So, you know what?
I’ll take the win.
The Systematic Hair Purge
At
exactly 12 days post-chemo, my follicles launched a full-scale retreat. And let
me tell you, chemo does not discriminate.
✔ Widow’s peak? Gone.
✔
Temples? Vacant.
✔
Eyebrows? Thinning. Outer edges already making their exit.
✔
Nose Hair/THROAT?? Hair? Nasal cilia (tiny hairs) are falling out,
leaving skin raw & dry.
✔
Lip hair? Evacuated. And I mean actual lips. Turns out, those
tiny vellus hairs on the pink part of your mouth? Chemo didn’t forget them.
✔
Pubic hair? Poof. If I didn’t know better, I’d think I got a
Brazilian wax in my sleep.
✔
Butt crack hair? Officially bald. My ass is as smooth as a baby seal.
✔
Armpits? Wiped clean. Razors are now obsolete.
At
this point, the only thing still holding on is my forearm hair. And honestly, I
don’t trust it.
I
should have shaved my hair when my widow’s peak vanished. But no, I waited. And
what did I get?
A
full-blown chemo dreadlock.
Not
attached to my scalp. Not salvageable. Just a rogue, matted mess of hair
clinging together in one last desperate attempt to stay relevant. Now, before I
even get to shaving, I have to cut this thing out because there is no
untangling this situation.
Lesson
learned: Once chemo starts taking your hair, don’t play games. You will
lose. Badly.
What NOT to Say to Someone Going
Through Chemo (AKA Me)
Look,
I know people mean well, but here are things you should never say to
someone losing their hair like a science experiment:
🛑 “I’ve never heard of that before.”
✔
Neither have I. Probably because NO ONE TALKS ABOUT THEIR BUTT CRACK HAIR
DISAPPEARING. But guess what? I am.
🛑 “So-and-so didn’t lose their hair
that fast.”
✔
That’s great for so-and-so, but I’m on Docetaxel (Taxotere) &
Carboplatin—a chemo duo that’s basically the Thanos snap of hair
loss.
🛑 “Why is it falling out in
patches?”
✔
Because chemo is a chaotic little gremlin. There is no graceful shedding
process. Just disaster mode.
🛑 “You should try ___ to stop the
hair loss.”
✔
Oh, should I? Tell me more about your medical degree. Spoiler: The only
way to stop chemo hair loss is to not have chemo.
So
instead of advice, just hand me a lint roller and tell me I look great.
Now, let’s discuss the most infuriating discovery of all: my natural hair fell out, but my highlighted, bleached hair is STILL HERE.
✔ Possible Theory #1: The bleach weakened the
follicles just enough to make them resistant to chemo.
✔
Possible Theory #2: My blonde hair is just more stubborn than the rest of me.
✔
Possible Theory #3: I am being punked.
So
now, I have random, wispy blonde strands giving the illusion that I still
have hair—when in reality, my scalp is mostly deserted.
Zoe’s Eyebrow Solidarity Move
I
should have shaved my head sooner. I knew it. Zoe knew it. And when she
saw me struggling, she made a move.
She
went upstairs, asked if she could take a quick shower, and then… shaved her
eyebrows.
Not
a trim. Not a mistake. She full-on took them off. Her way of saying:
💖
Mama, we’ve got this.
💖
You’re not alone.
💖
If you’re losing your hair, I’ll meet you there.
And
let me tell you, she rocks it.
Meanwhile,
I still have enough eyebrow left to fill mine in, but the message was
received loud and clear: We’re in this together.
The Inevitable Choice
✔ I knew this was coming.
✔
I said I’d take control.
✔
I still haven’t.
But
my hair has already decided for me. Tonight, the rest is coming off.
So Let’s Talk About The WINS, Because
THEY ARE HUGE!
✔ I feel great! (Cue the confetti cannons.)
✔ Always love teaching my girls. Pilates for the WIN.
(Not to brag, but I could probably still out-plank half of you.)
✔ Met the most amazing medical oncologist at Mass
General—Dr. Dejan Juric. (He’s so good he deserves his own post. Seriously.
If I had to pick a team captain for this mess, it’d be him.)
✔ Mini Meg’s cooking & treats: Turkey lasagna,
honeycomb bread, salad, tea, chocolate chip cookie cups with Reese’s… YUM.
Absolute perfection. At this point, I should probably just hire her as my
personal chef.
✔ Caity, Chip, and Zoe all copying LC and bringing me
Mint Girl Scout Cookies. Love you all, but we can pause on this one.
I am officially drowning in Thin Mints. I will either freeze them for the
apocalypse or start trading them like currency.
✔ A fellow breast cancer friend sent the perfect gift of
hair coverings. Couldn’t have arrived at a better time. My head appreciates
the style upgrade, and my scalp no longer looks like it lost a bar fight.
✔ Wonderful day out with CG, followed by 15 Walnut with a
visit from MM & LC. A cocktail, friends, and food I was actually able
to enjoy? Miracles do exist.
✔ And last but NOT LEAST… FLOWERS!
I’m sure you’ve all figured out by now that I love fresh flowers. This
arrangement? Spectacular. I wouldn’t expect anything less from LC. Also,
I have never seen ranunculus like this before—turns out they’re called Italian
Ranunculus. Does anyone know how to grow these? (Not that I will, but
someone should.)
So yes—WIN. WIN. WIN.
The Final Question: The Hats, The Wigs
& The Challenge
Before
anyone gets any bright ideas—I DO NOT NEED MORE HATS! I have dozens
of options in every color, length, human hair, synthetic, and I can
velcro them into each hat.
And
then there’s my $4,000 wig (yes, I will include a photo), which is
basically the Chanel of hairpieces.
I’m
heading upstairs when Zoe gets home, and we’re shaving my head. But I have a
question for all of you...
Who
would be willing to shave their eyebrows in solidarity? No judgment. (Okay, a little
judgment.)
Or,
if that’s too much, let’s play a game:
- Which wig in the picture below is my $4,000 wig
- Which ones are real hair vs. synthetic?
- Today’s hair/hat combo—real or synthetic?
Whoever gets all three correct plus shaves their eyebrows wins my forever devotion.
BREAKING
NEWS…Just When I Thought Enough Was Enough…
I
sent a picture of my disaster zone of a face to the nurse this morning,
expecting her to confirm what I already assumed: chemo acne.
GUESS
WHAT?!
Not
chemo acne.
It’s
a freaking Taxotere rash.
Because apparently, losing my hair, drying out my skin, and feeling like a
human lint roller just wasn’t enough. Nope. Now I get the bonus
round—face edition.
What
is a Taxotere Rash?
✔ A lovely side effect of Docetaxel (Taxotere), a
chemo drug that clearly didn’t feel like it was doing enough damage.
✔
It’s not just a rash. It’s red, inflamed, bumpy, and sometimes peely.
(Basically, my skin is throwing a tantrum.)
✔
It usually shows up on the face, chest, arms— or, you know, wherever
it wants, because control is a concept chemo doesn’t believe in.
Why
Is This Happening to Me?
✔ Taxotere attacks fast-growing cells—including skin
cells. (Rude.)
✔
It causes inflammation and increased sensitivity. (Red, blotchy, and
slightly angry is my new aesthetic.)
✔
My immune system is on vacation, so my skin is reacting to everything.
⚠️ WARNING: Viewer Discretion Advised ⚠️
The
following image is not for the faint of heart. Must be 18+ to
witness this level of chemo-induced chaos. Side effects may include shock,
disbelief, and an uncontrollable urge to moisturize. Proceed with
caution—you can’t unsee this.
✔ A few days? A week? FOREVER? (Who knows? It’s a
surprise every day!)
✔
It can appear right after infusion and stick around like an unwanted
houseguest.
✔
Each chemo cycle could bring it back like a recurring nightmare.
So,
let’s recap:
✔
Balding in patches.
✔
Hair falling out of places I didn’t know had hair.
✔
Blonde highlights are surviving like cockroaches.
✔
And now, my face is falling apart too.







I’d shave my eyebrows for you any day😉😉😉
ReplyDeleteYou are beautiful red face and all. ❤️❤️❤️
ReplyDeleteThe Ranunculus are called Clooney. Blush color, so get out your catalog start ordering because you have something to look forward to to start growing this summer! ❤️
ReplyDeleteJJ I’d shave my ANYTHING for you 💕 and
ReplyDelete1. The mannequin head in the middle is the bougie wig
2. The faux are on ski hats the authentic ar on the baseball hats
3. Real