Oi, Baldy, wake up! That was how my husband took to rousing me from sleep in those days.
It was the previous year when I resolved to do something that had never crossed my mind before. Some time before that, strange little lumps began to spring up all over my scalp. They looked for all the world like a rash, and the itching was nearly unbearable. My hair was shedding at a frightful pace.
I visited both the GP and a private hair specialist, but neither was much help. The doctor told me there was little point in taking vitaminsin her opinion, theyd never done anyone any good. Then, by chance, I came across an article claiming that shaving ones head completely could invigorate the hair follicles. The idea lingered in my mind for quite some time before I was brave enough to consider it, especially after my son admitted the notion of a bald mother made him nervous. In spite of his worrying, I pressed ahead.
I told my husband, William, to start with the clippers, then finish the job with a razor. He fetched the clippers, still half-convinced I might change my mind. But I was resolute, and soon it was done. When I looked in the mirror this head, so completely uncovered, surprised even methe shape was truly rather fine.
The greatest inconvenience was going outside; my head would become bitterly cold, and as my hair started to return, short new growths clung annoyingly to my pillow, making for many restless nights.
After that day, William took to calling me Baldy in the mornings, and it always set me off laughing. I was, by far, the baldest in our family, a fact which became a household joke. At first, our children were taken aback, but soon enough, my son, George, declared perhaps he ought to try and copy his mother.
My mother, ever the traditionalist, insisted I not visit until my hair had grown back, claiming she couldnt bear the sight. My daughter, Jane, begged me not to attend her school meetings without wearing a hat, and William, the unflappable soul, mused that if I were to show up bare-headed, no one would recall the meetings purpose, and the other mothers would envy my sense of style.
Once the hair was gone, the lumps vanished with it. Jane couldnt stop giggling at my new look and wondered aloud what sort of antics I might try next. I once overheard her tell her brother that she half-expected her mother to get a tattoo on her bald head.
Looking back on it all, it seems almost comical. But at the time, it was simply a chapter of life, as peculiar and ordinary as any other.












