We asked Dr. Lila Swell, the Bald Girls Do Lunch psychological advisor, for some insights about looking different, feeling different, and how women with alopecia areata might navigate any inner disconnects between how we look and how we feel.
Here are Dr. Swell's top 10 appearance tips for women with alopecia areata:
But it’s not the real you – it’s just a part of you.
There’s a mourning process whenever there is a loss. It’s normal to go through a grieving stage. After you grieve and mourn, you realize that you are more than your hair and more than your body. And if you never had hair, you might be aware almost every day that you're different from other people — and that's a normal feeling too.
When you do, you gain confidence. Then what other people might think of your outer appearance doesn’t matter that much to you.
Over time, you discover that the words about hair loss (especially spoken by others) don’t matter nearly as much as your own attitude.
They will follow your lead.
Changing your attitude is not required on any set timetable. The way you view your alopecia depends to large degree on how you value personal appearance, and how much you have valued “perfection” in the past.
If you are comfortable with who you are, you’re going to project that. Social pressures about physical appearance are strong, but your beliefs in your personal strengths are a mighty counterforce. Even if you had a childhood onset of alopecia and grew up in a family that never talked about it openly, it’s never too late to start a conversation if you want to.
Society says things like “you can’t grow old gracefully” and that youth is to be valued. The more you recognize and value your own needs, the more you will be able to counteract social pressures.
It takes time for people to get used to things that are different…especially appearances.
The Bald Girls Do Lunch format successfully creates social environments in which no one feels strange or alone.
Dr. Swell’s advisory role with Bald Girls Do Lunch is to support and guide our community in how to become our best selves, how to live in harmony with ourselves to increase our successes every day, and how to use nonjudgmental communication to benefit ourselves and those around us.