Going, Going, Gone.

When I was younger I loathed my hair. Curly and wild with a mind of its own, I would sit looking at myself in the mirror and grow angry over the fact that I felt so different from my peers around me. Me with my corkscrew curls and them with their bone straight and manageable locks.

All I wanted, more than anything, was just to blend in. My hair though, my hair made me stand out.

My mom would constantly wipe away my tears and promise me that one day, one day you will love your hair Mandy. Woman pay hundreds of dollars just to have hair like yours.

I’d roll my eyes and think, no. I want straight hair.

In high school I’d wake at 5AM daily to spend an hour plus blowing my locks straight then ironing them out with the latest hot tool that came with the hope of fitting in.

At some point in my senior year of high school I surrendered to what I was born with. I was tired. Tired of fighting it and tired of spending so much time on attemping to alter it to look like everyone else.

Over the years I’d learn that my mom was right about this too. I did learn to not only love my hair but became so deeply grateful for the individuality that came with each twist and coil and the wildness I felt looking in the mirror.

My hair became one of my favorite physical attributes.

I grew it long and stopped using so many hair products to try and control it into place and allowed it to be wild and free. I allowed it to live untamed and soon realized that it was as if allowing my hair the freedom to be itself allowed me to as well.

When I was diagnosed with cancer back in November and after waking from surgery to learn that I would have to do chemotherapy, my first questions was, ‘will I lose my hair?’

Originally the plan was to do a chemo combo that would preserve my hair. Maybe it would thin out a little bit but would still allow me to walk throughout the world with a little dignity in tacked and animinity on days I didn’t want the world to know.

However, plans changed and although I was still given the choice, I knew in that moment the only choice I really had. And it came with losing the very thing that made me feel the most like me.

Despite my best efforts at keeping as much hair as I possibly could with cold capping, exactly fourteen days after my first chemo infusion I woke and ran my fingers through my hair and with it came a handful of curls. I knew at this rate my hope of keeping at least fifty percent of my hair was going to fade fast and I wondered what was I really holding onto anyways?

By mid-morning on Friday so much of my hair had come out that I sent a text to my friend who is a hairdresser and asked if she could cut it short. A few hours later I was sitting in her chair watching her cut my long locks into a cute bob.

A moment I thought was going to be sad turned out to feel…fine. I felt nothing but excitement when I realized my new do was actually really cute. I can do this I thought.

But the hope of this slowing down the hair loss began to dwindle by Sunday morning when so much hair had fallen out that I started to get bald patched peppered throughout and the joke I shared with my family and oncologist started to become a reality.

“If I start to look like Gollum from Lord of the Rings, I’ll know it’s time to just shave my head.”

By Sunday afternoon I looked in the mirror and knew.

I was already going to my younger brother’s house for dinner and I Facetimed him.

“Do you have clippers?”

“Why?”

“Cause I’m starting to look like Gollum. We are shaving my head.”

At first he wasn’t on board. All he could see what a decent amount of hair remaining but I flipped it over to the side to reveal what was hidden beneath my carefully placed strands.

“I can’t do this. I can’t walk around with bald patches.”

I thought I would cry. I thought I would stare at myself in the mirror as locks fell to the ground and feel as if a part of me was dying but the truth is, I didn’t.

Instead, I laughed.

As I shaved the first bit off on the side of my head I was met with a rush of adrenaline a joyful giggles. I was surprised to see that instead of sadness, I felt free.

We shaped my hair into different styles from mullet to mohawk and resided on leaving a bit on top just for fun. I mean, I’m probably never going to shave my head again, I might as well have a bit of fun with it.

By the next morning even that was starting to come out in droves and Monday afternoon I decided to say goodbye to the last strands and shave my head completely.

And for the first time in my life I have nothing to hide behind.

And that feels utterly liberating.

And absolutely freeing.