I must have
been washing my face when it happened. Making sure I got the eye shadow off. Or
maybe it was just random – an eyelash dropping on my cheek or my pillow, wholly
unnoticed by me. It’s not hard to imagine that. If you asked me the current
color of my eyebrows or eyelashes, I’d have to say “transparent.” I retain
about 50% of my eyebrows and I joke that I have seven eye lashes left. It could
be more. It could be 14. At any rate, even finding them to apply mascara has
become a game of Where’s Waldo. And my hair, what I can see of it, has turned
white since having chemo - except for an odd diamond of gray, right at my
widow’s peak.
When you’re
diagnosed with cancer and you know treatment is going to make your hair fall
out, it isn’t the worst of your concerns – but make no mistake, it’s on the
list. And as you sink into the chemo swamp of depression your bald head &
Pillsbury Dough Boy steroid face do nothing to increase your happiness. Friends cheer you on with “bald is beautiful”
– and indeed it is. On Sinead O’Connor or Demi Moore. For me, it provokes
images of women collaborators who were shaved bald after wars, or concentration
camp victims. There is shame and fear attached to cancer. Your shaved head, at
my age, is not mistaken for a political statement – people avert their
eyes.
But
catastrophes are always good learning experiences – like it or not. I surprised
myself by choosing white/gray wigs, for instance. I tried on my preferred
color, red, and was surprised that I didn’t like it. I tried blonde and brown
and black and finally white. And I can’t decide whether it makes me look more
my age or simply less like I’m trying too hard. I do know that I’ve finally
done the very thing I raged against for years. I’m making the effort to age
gracefully. I wear less makeup. I’ve given up high heels. And I feel pretty
good about all that.
A male
friend and I were discussing relationships the other day and he asked how I
felt about them these days. I replied (cheerfully) “I’m bald and I don’t know
how long I have to live, so it’s a moot point.” But that just leads me to
another discovery – which is that I still like to look presentable for me – and for my
friends (who panic a little when they drop in to discover I’m still in PJs at
4:00 p.m.)
I’m having
fun learning to work around the appearance-catastrophes. And I find I’m hoping
to have a lot more time to learn this growing-old-gracefully thing.
2 comments:
Hey Linda,
this natural look is very beautiful and indeed graceful.
Nothing to worry for!
Muchg love from Traute
Linda, I admire your tact and desire your thought of sharing your inner most thoughts with the world. I find this very unselfish of you.
There is much I would like to include, in my short reply not often offered, but the one thing I do want to tell you is how gorgeous you look. I too am seeing myself differently in the mirror, due to normal aging, but I love how some can age and look more wonderful or fashionable around an older traits. To age and be natural , is something not all want to try and accept, but there are those who realize it is part of the "life" process where you can shine at every stage of your being. You are projecting this, at a level some will never allow themselves to realize. You are gorgeous. I hope to continue following your progression in being a sincere, "this is who I am" as a means for me to push aside any thoughts I have of recapturing the past which no longer pertains.
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