Thursday, November 17, 2011

Wigging Out

The loss of my hair has not only been emotionally painful but physically as well. I knew the day was inevitable but still shed many tears over what I would look like bald. Each day after chemo I pulled my fingers through my hair to see if today was the day. I was always overwhelmed with relief when I realized I was "safe" for another day.

I think <no expert here> that the hair loss portion of chemotherapy is more traumatic for women than men. Women make a ritual out of their hair and I am no exception. I love going to my hairdresser, curling up reading magazines by the fire in the winter with the best hot chocolate and a glass of wine in the summer. L and I would laugh and giggle for the whole two hours. When it came time for what both of us assumed would be my last appointment for awhile we were an emotional wreck. We even started with a glass of wine to get our emotions under control. I had decided to cut my hair short in anticipation of my future. My hair had not been long in a long time but I went from shoulder length to a pixie cut. I did love my new do but it was a constant reminder of what was to come.

After my first round of chemo I went to a wig consultant as I had heard it could take 7-10 days to get one in and you lose your hair approx 14 days after chemo so there was no time to waste. I called around and discovered there was a huge difference in what services were provided with the wig as well as the price. I choose a place that was more expensive but it offered a full consultation, the wig, stand, shampoo and conditioner and styling.

Now the real vs synthetic. I opted for synthetic only due to cost. I could not justify $1000-2000 for a real hair wig which I was hoping to have for only 6 months. There are different types of caps and this is where the wigs are separated, get what is most comfortable and you feel will not come off. I went for the "Cadillac" version of the cap. It is full mesh cap with rubber pads and tightens in the back. It fit my head and there was no chance that thing was coming off. Overall choosing a wig is pretty basic. Pick the cap, pick the length and pick the colour. Hence the reason choosing someone who can style it makes all the difference.

The chemo school did forewarn me that when hair loss was about to occur it would feel like a too tight pony tail. What they didn't tell me is that it would feel like 500 too tight pony tails. On day 10 after chemo my head was really sensitive to the point where it hurt to wash it. Laying my head on a pillow was by no means soothing and I was thinking at this point a geisha pillow would come in handy.

I think this is your body's way of coming to terms with hair loss. By day 12, I was thinking we were going to need new plumbing. My hair, even as short as it was, was coming out in droves. Everywhere I looked there was hair on the floor around me. I took the dog for a walk and there were streams of hair coming out from my head. So much so that I checked my head a lot during this time to ensure no bald spots were occurring.

I called D to find out where my wig was and made an appointment for day 14. I have always had fine hair but a ton of it. You have over 100,000 hairs on your head and I was losing about 10 at a time. If I ran my fingers through my hair it looked like I had cut a chunk out. I figured at this rate I would be bald by day 14.

On day 13 I did not run my fingers through my hair as I was in conserve my hair mode. I didn't go anywhere but I did wash it but admittedly did not brush it. I started to, but I was brushing out more hair than I think was on my head. I then decided I was ready for my hair to be gone. I had come to terms with it and knew that <unfortunately> thousands of other woman had been in this same place before me.

Now I might talk the talk, but getting in the car to go to my wig appointment was a whole other ballgame. It was like going to meet my maker and the 50 steps from the car to the front door took many long deep breaths. B had come with me and I had already decided he would be the first to see my head shaved. I couldn't see it happen. D was awesome and when I told her I couldn't watch she understood.

She spun me around and began cutting <she cuts your hair to 1/8" long as the wig and a newly bald head would be too sensitive together>. She even took the effort to move any cut hair away from falling on the cape. When she was done B looked at me and said...you have good shaped head. D massaged my head with a tingly product which felt great and soothing. It was the least painful my head had been in days. It was a relief.

She left the room and B said..it doesn't look bad. I turned my head slightly to the mirror and did a quick peek...was he crazy! Quick, turn my head back. Won't be doing that again for awhile. Bravery is not my forte.

Once the wig was on D spun me back..well that looked pretty good. She parted it, shaped and styled it. Wow this thing actually looks like hair!

That night I took off "Molly" and stared in the mirror. I was more than hair. I had gone through so much in a short period of time and come through it in what I term as easily. This was one more hurdle that I had crossed over. It was <in my mind> the high jump of hurdles. From now on I am on the healing side of this crazy cancer thing.  Now quick put a hat on because my head is freezing!

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