There are lessons to be learned from chemo onset baldness.
If you are the one whose hair has fallen out you tend to be embarrassed about
the way you look. If you are a friend of
one whose hair has fallen out you tend to be embarrassed because you don't know
exactly how to react when you fist meet after the falling out. It really is a bit uneasy for both sides
because you can't ignore your shining head and your friends can't pretend they
didn't notice. There is that awkward
moment when neither of you knows exactly what to say. Your friend does not want to acknnowledge
that you are really, really ill (after all, nobody gets chemotherapy for a sprained
ankle) and you know that what you say will upset your friend. You learn in that instant your friends truly
care about you and you care about them, something you don't think about often
enough. Once that moment has passed you both try to lighten it up: "Nice haircut, great for the
summer." "Hey, it looks good
on you." "It's not that
bad." “Maybe you ought to keep it like that” (yeah right!) One of my favorites: "You know you have
a nice shaped head." One I haven't
heard yet: "Boy, I bet you save a lot of money on shampoo." Does anyone know if Bruce Willis could use a
stand in?
3 comments:
You are correct, most of us are painfully awkward. But, you should know we love you and send our best thoughts your way every day.
Bill, you are making me laugh - thank you for sharing your wonderfully unique voice!
Leonard Nemoy needs a stand-in.
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