Transformations … Coping with Cancer by Leigh Pate - February 29, 2016February 29, 2016 Another personal essay published February 23 on Curetoday.com. Even though cancer treatment is behind me … hopefully forever … I’ve learned that sharing my story and voicing many of those feelings and fears that cancer patients know is truly helpful for others and healing for me. So I’ve begun sharing and writing about my treatment based on journal entries that have remained private until now. A mohawk … for a minute mid-shave I watched the warm water rinse away the long hair that clung between my fingers and wrapped around my hands and wrists. I ran my hands through hair and rinsed away the hair again. And again. And again. It was time. My oncology nurse had prepared me for this moment. “I will bet my last paycheck you will lose your hair”, he said. “Make sure you procure protection for your head from the cold and sun.” Which was good advice. Hair turns out to be surprisingly practical. But his advice didn’t touch my worst fears. My hair was soft and fine and honey blonde. Now that beautiful hair would be gone, replaced by the scarves and hats that are a symbol of sickness. My bald head would scream “CANCER” like a neon sign, flashing “Sick person, right here”. Strangers would look at me and see a disease. But I wasn’t a diseased sick person. I was healthy and strong and fit and capable and attractive. At least I was until this breast cancer came out of nowhere. I hated the idea of the world seeing anything else. A request to my friends yielded a cascade of gift certificates and hats and scarves. A trip to the wig shop became an adventure as we tried on dozens of wigs. And as we laughed and experimented it occurred to me that I could become anyone I wanted. Perhaps a platinum blonde Marilyn Monroe? Or sexy wavy long auburn locks? Or short and curly brunette? Eventually I decided to become a redhead during cancer. I had always liked red hair. So why not try it out now? By the time my hair rained down in the shower that morning, my arsenal of head protection was ready. My boyfriend requested the job of shaving my head. He had been hauling borrowed clippers back and forth to my house for weeks – on call for the big day. So I went to him that morning after unstopping the shower drain and simply said, “It’s time.” We set up a chair and a mirror and went to work, shaving an interim Mohawk and taking photos of the temporary punk-rock alter-ego who smiled back in the mirror. And by shaving my head he did more than save a trip to the hair salon. He gently transformed the fear of lost beauty into an embrace and acceptance. Yet despite the preparations, I found much of the carefully procured head protection stayed unworn in the closet. I never touched the sassy red wig again – not even for the novelty of experiencing the world a redhead. I only wore the hats and scarves for their most practical purpose … to physically protect my head from the cold and the sun … just as my nurse advised. Somehow in all the preparations and the outpouring of support, I found I didn’t need to hide behind my hair anymore. Instead I went bare-headed … bald scalp shining … in my home or out with friends or anytime when head protection became hot or itchy or uncomfortable. I wore hats or scarves when they suited me, and never to hide behind them. I wore a black bandana printed with skulls and crossbones to yoga class, secretly loving the sideways glances from people too polite to ask. I pulled off my hat in work meetings … my way of warning colleagues not count me out … that I was still a player in this professional game, cancer or not. I learned to accept the knowing smiles from women and men who did a double-take at the grocery store, then offered a smile that reached their eyes, an acknowledgement that they knew and understood. Eventually I struck up a lengthy conversation with a young hipster and when I explained I had cancer, his mouth fell open and his eyes went wide. I realized from his shocked look that he really had no idea I was even sick. He thought my bald head was just another hipster hairstyle, unremarkable in urban Seattle. And I finally realized that while my illness was screamingly obvious to me, the rest of the world rarely noticed. Most people see what they want to see. Most simply accept whatever you choose to present. And fundamentally the bald head can mean whatever we make it mean to ourselves and to others. Friends and loved ones will walk with you and love you and support you bald or redheaded or wearing a skull-covered bandana. And while the hair eventually came back, those lessons of love and loyalty and self never left. Share on Facebook Share Share on TwitterTweet Send email Mail
You are beautiful and strong Leigh. Thank you for sharing your journey-you continue to inspire. I will be praying for you as you fight this fight. And that we will fight with you. ! ~Vida
Thanks Vida! But … just know I am past treatment and recovered now … hopefully forever recovered. I joke that I’ve entered my “Prosthelytizing” phase of cancer recovery … defined by this irrepressible urge to write about the experience and help others through it. And have found it really helps others to share some to insights from having come through treatment that are pretty impossible to learn till you’ve lived it.
Yet another beautiful post. It left me with tears in my eyes. You must find a way to share these thoughts with the largest audience possible. A book? There are tens of thousands of people, women I think in particular, who would find comfort in your words.