Life Lessons Learned From Hair Loss
In 2013, I was officially diagnosed with Frontal Fibrosing Alopecia (FFA). When I was diagnosed with this hair loss condition, I had never even heard of it. Somehow, after my diagnosis, in my internet search, I was able to find an online support group for those suffering from alopecia. Within the online Alopecia Foundation site, I found a group specifically formed to support those diagnosed with FFA. It was by participating in this internet group that I first found answers to the questions I had regarding my hair loss journey.
If you have recently been diagnosed with scarring alopecia, or if you have been suffering from it for years, I am writing this post for you because I hope that you will find support from others whom have learned to live with this disease. If you have not already done so, I hope you will one day be able to look back on the journey and say, “I am a better person because I have this disease than I was before I had it because now I have learned so much about who I really am as a person.”
When I was first diagnosed with this condition five years ago, I never would have believed I would one day lose over 50% of my hair, nor would I believe that I would be able to say that I that I have gained more from having this condition than I have lost. The process of getting to this point has taken much time, many tears, much pain, and a lot of searching for answers.
It was not until at least a year after my diagnosis that I first learned of the Cicatricial Alopecia Research Foundation (CARF). It is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing patient education and support for this little-known condition.
In June of 2016, still searching for answers, searching for a cure, and searching for that silver bullet that would give me the solution that I believed had to have, I registered for the 7th International Patient-Doctor Conference in New Orleans, Louisiana, that was sponsored by the Cicatricial Alopecia Research Foundation (CARF). I was interested in participating in CARF, a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing patient education for the little know condition of scarring alopecia or cicatricial alopecia, because it is dedicated to providing “education and patient support,” while also raising public awareness of this baffling disease, and the organization is also dedicated to promoting research into the causes and potential cures for the disease.
June 2016 My hair loss when I attended the CARF Conference could still be camouflaged by wearing a headband. |
Determined to find answers for this strange and baffling condition that had turned my life upside down, I was just sure if I attended this particular conference and had a chance to learn from all the experts in the field of scarring alopecia, I’d find what I was looking for: a cure.
And so, in 2016, my husband I journeyed to New Orleans, the first time we’d ever been to this wonderful city, so I could learn more about the disease itself, find answers I had about treatment, and gain the support I needed to live with this rare condition that had struck me seemingly out of nowhere.
While, the world of hair loss was still a very new world to me, I wasn’t a complete novice. I’d learned a great deal about my condition from the previously mentioned support group for those suffering from Frontal Fibrosing Alopecia that was sponsored by the Alopecia Foundation online.
I’d even written a blog post about my journey with hair loss that I had posted in the online support group. From that post, I’d made a new friend, one whom was not a part of the online support group, but she was one whom was very knowledgeable about the condition and led a support group in a major city on the West Coast. She had directly responded to my blog post in writing and gave enough identifying information that I was able to track her down by sending an email to her support group. She responded by calling me. I think we spent nearly two hours on the phone the first time we chatted. Finally, and for the very first time, I actually was able to speak with a real live person who had the same disease I did, and who knew so much about it. She was involved in helping with the CARF Conference, and she encouraged me to register and attend.
My ever-supportive husband also encouraged me to attend the conference. He said he would accompany me and would spend the time I was at the conference exploring New Orleans. And, so when the conference time arrived, off we went to NOLA.
I remember not long after we checked into our hotel, Jim left the room to get ice, and returned saying, “You know you are at an alopecia conference when you start seeing bald women.” I was horrified. Bald? My worst fear would be realized if I went bald, I thought to myself.
Later that night, the night before the actual conference was to begin, anxious and yet hopeful, I put on my rather new custom-made hair piece that I had recently started wearing to camouflage my hair loss, and boarded a bus hired to carry fellow scarring alopecia sufferers to a pre-conference reception that was being held in a meeting room at a fancy restaurant near the French Quarter. Before I’d even left the bus, I actually connected with women I’d already met online. Conversations with these women soothed my nerves and made me feel less alone as I faced actually walking into a room where other conference attenders had gathered for a reception welcoming them to the conference.
As I walked up the stairs to the meeting room, my mind went back to so many other receptions I had attended during my career in education. Those meet and greet gatherings were always so enjoyable because I had a chance to mingle with colleagues that I knew and respected from my professional world. I always looked forward to the conversations we would have that helped us form more personal connections, but this meet and greet with others afflicted with hair loss petrified me. My confidence in socializing and in meeting new people had always been high, but after suffering from hair loss, I found social gatherings had suddenly become stressful. I had lost a great deal of the confidence I had always possessed. I felt very alone in my struggle, and I also felt very alone as I attended the function. I only knew a few others because of “conversations” I’d had with them online, and I knew my friend I had spoken to on the phone, but she had many duties that night in making sure that all went well for conference attendees, so I didn’t feel I could latch right on to her for support and encouragement.
I’ll never forget entering that meeting room because as looked around, I was struck by how beautiful the women in that room were. I don’t know when I’ve ever been in a room filled with more beautiful, gracious, and well-put-together women. And the hair! I saw the most amazing hair! All I could think was, Why are these beautiful women with these amazing heads of hair attending a conference for those suffering from hair loss? Soon, I was being introduced to others by the friends I made on the bus and by the friend that I made on the phone because of my blog post. The women I met were so authentic and confident, I found myself asking myself as I studied each woman’s hair style, hair line, and hair color, Is that hair real, or is it a wig or hair piece? Those of you who suffer from hair loss will probably chuckle when you read this because that is what we do. We study hair lines, don’t we?
Soon, I learned each woman there was there to learn the same hair secrets I wanted to learn, and I learned we were there for each other. In fact, by the end of the meet and greet, I was actually asking others, “Is that your bio hair?” “How much hair have you lost?” “What has your journey been like?” “How have you disguised your hair loss?” “Where DID you get that AMAZING hair.” Others were asking me the same thing.
Suddenly, I had a whole new group of friends who knew and understood the journey I had been on. I could relate to them. They could relate to me. We were interested in each other’s stories. Finally, I was not alone.
The next morning, the conference finally began. There was an impressive list of doctors and experts in the field of hair loss listed as speakers. Always the student, and having attended so many educational conferences during my professional life, I was ready to learn as I entered the conference presentation room armed with my registration packet, a newly purchased composition book, and writing utensils
The first speaker gave an overview of the basics of cicatricial alopecia. I took few notes, as I already knew the basics: cicatricial alopecia is a form of hair loss accompanied by scarring. I knew this. I was attending the conference to learn more than just the basics about this condition, or so I thought. Really, deep down inside, I was attending because I was just sure I would find a cure, a solution, something to STOP this dreadful disease from playing havoc with my life, my appearance, and my emotions.
The speaker giving the overview had my attention, my pen was ready to take notes, but my mind could not seem to accept what I heard her say, “permanent and irreversible.” I wrote those words down almost against my will. Even as I knew these words were true, I could not fully accept them as truth. As she spoke, I found myself thinking: She is a specialist in the area of hair loss, chairman of the board, and she knows all there is to know this awful condition, so how could she start off the entire conference program by saying scarring alopecia is permanent and irreversible? Wasn’t there something she could say that would give me hope? I didn’t come to the conference to hear that I had a permanent and irreversible condition. Those words confirmed what I already knew but could not accept.
In truth, once scarring has taken place where hair once grew, the condition is permanent and irreversible. The goal is to stop the progress before scarring has occurred. There was so much unknown about the condition I had that I just could not begin to process it all. Perhaps, whenever one is diagnosed with a disease that is life altering, it takes time to process what the condition or disease means to the person with the disease. Words on a screen after doing an internet search that describe a disease or condition or disorder do not convey the full impact that diagnosis has on one’s psyche, nor do those words speak to how difficult it may be to accept and live with a diagnosis.
Case in point: I attended the CARF Conference two years ago, and I am just now able to write about the impact it had me on my blog. As a blogger, I had written about my family, the death of my daughter, health issues I had regarding my heart, and about a disastrous fall I had taken which resulted in six months of putting my life on hold, but I could not write about experiencing hair loss. I had to process much of what I learned for years before I could write in depth about it. I sank into a pretty deep depression. I cried. I hid. I spent money on wigs, toppers, scarves, headbands, and hats, but I could not write about it all.
When I attended the CARF Conference in 2016, I was sure I would find the perfect treatment option for me so I could stop the devastation that comes from losing one’s hair, and so I could stop the sometimes “severe itching and burning” in the scalp that accompanies this disease.
I did not find a cure for this disease at the conference. No one has. I did not find the silver bullet that would stop my hair loss. My hair continued to fall out. Today, much of my scalp is now covered with scar tissue that is permanent and irreversible.
At some point in my journey, I decided that if I could even find a treatment or solution for the itching and burning that accompanied flares to the scalp that I’d be happy even if the hair continue to fall out. Somehow, I did finally come to a place where most of the time I do not often suffer from intense pain, burning, or stinging in my scalp. My scalp rarely feels like it is crawling these days. In fact, my dermatologist recently told me that my scalp is the “quietest” it has been in all the years he has been treating me. But, I am not cured. I may finally be in more or less remission, or my disease may have more or less “burned out.” Only time will tell.
I do not know what caused me to be at this stage in the physical manifestation of the form or scarring alopecia that I have now apparently entered. I dabbled in using many of the drugs known to help with the disease, but reactions to the drugs, or unwanted side effects caused me to not use the treatments. I stopped all medications and treatments except for the rare days when I have flare. On those days, I apply a small amount of clobetasol solution, or tacrolimus to inflamed area on my scalp.
When I was diagnosed, my disease was so advanced, and there was so much scarring that really there was little I could do about the condition. I had an advanced case before it was ever treated because I was not diagnosed until I had significant scarring. Early diagnosis and treatment is thought to give the patient with scarring alopecia a better chance for stopping or at least slowing down the progression of the disease.
Since those early days in my journey into the world of hair loss, I have learned there is more to this journey than just finding the right medical treatment. This journey involves doing a lot of work in the innermost parts of the mind, the heart, and the emotions. As I have sought healing for this condition, I have learned healing is an inside job. I have learned I must heal from the inside out.
February 2015 My 70th Birthday Wearing a hat which is pulled down to hide my hairline at the beach in Florida. |
As I look back on the nearly two years since I attended the CARF Conference, I have to ask myself what I have learned about myself.
- I have learned that my journey with hair loss is similar to the journey of loss that I experienced after the death of my daughter. Certainly, the loss of one’s hair can never be compared to the loss of a loved one, but the journey itself is one also marked with five to seven stages that have been identified as the stages of grief.
- I’ve learned that my identity is not found in my hair, my appearance, or how I present to the outside world. Learning this truth, is a gift. I have more freedom in self-expression now than I had when I had a head covered with hair. My identity has nothing to do with how I look or how others see me.
- I have learned that I am resilient. Resiliency can’t be taught. Resiliency is only achieved when one goes through loss, trial, or hardship. Resiliency is also a gift because according the definition to resilience in Mirriam-Webster, it allows one to adjust to and easily accept misfortune or change. I don’t think that most of us actually easily accept misfortune or life altering change, but I do think that once we learn that we are resilient, we find it much easier to be resilient each time we meet misfortune.
- I’ve learned that the fear of losing most of one’s hair is much worse than actually losing a large portion of one’s hair. Quite honestly, in those early days after I was diagnosed with FFA, and after I saw the photos of what might happen to my hair, I was consumed by fear. After the initial shock of the diagnosis, I went into denial. I told myself I would have a different outcome than the poor women in the photos illustrating FFA which can be found in the literature about this disease, yet when my appearance began to resemble that which I feared most, I no longer was afraid over how I might look.
- I have learned that as in so many other areas of life, acceptance is the first step in getting on with the hard things in life. Acceptance itself is a process. It takes time. It takes making peace with those things over which we have no control.
Recently, as I spoke with another hair loss sufferer, we spoke of how we are almost thankful that we have had to have this journey because we have learned so much about ourselves on the journey. We have learned resilience and authenticity. We’ve learned to adapt and live life to the fullest anyway. We’ve learned that reaching out and helping others along the journey gives us joy and enriches our lives.
I am passionate about being involved in educating others about this disease. Beauticians and doctors are on the front lines when it comes to being the first to observe what might be happening when a woman first begins to show signs of losing hair, but unfortunately most beauticians and many, far too many, doctors have never seen scarring alopecia and don’t recognize its symptoms. I consulted the first dermatologist six years before I was diagnosed. During those six years, I consulted three more dermatologists. None recognized my disease until I finally insisted on a biopsy. By that time, I had advanced and significant loss.
I am passionate about research for this disease because I do not want my daughters, my sons, my grandchildren, my nieces or nephews, my cousins, my siblings to have to suffer from this terrible condition. I don’t want anyone to go through the effects of this disease. It breaks my heart when I read of each new diagnosis.
I am passionate about providing support for others whom have been diagnosed with scarring alopecia. I am so very grateful for those whom went before me because of the way they have taken an affliction and turned it into ways to help others. There are so many of you out there that have led the way for me. Thank you.
For all these reasons, I intend to write more about the hair loss journey I have been on. I will add my voice to all those others suffering from little known orphan diseases. Scarring alopecia or cicatricial alopecia is just one of many immune disorders that qualify as orphan diseases.
This is my disease. I own it. I will not let it own me.
Girl Friend Party Christmas 2017 Wearing a wig and my favorite boots - a winning combination. |