From Deseret News archives:
Bald Girls Do Lunch to buoy S.L. women
Then she went shopping for wigs and scarves in various colors and lengths. Her "look" is whatever she wants it to be, including bald.
Thea Chassin has no hair on her head, no eyebrows, no body hair. Her eyelashes "come and go."
She's not shy around cameras or strangers or pretty much anyone, either. She's made peace with the condition, called alopecia areata, which first appeared when she was in her 20s, in the form of a quarter-sized bald patch on the back of her head, surrounded by otherwise long, thick hair.
Chassin had a couple of bouts of partial balding before, but in 1997 her hair started thinning and disappearing entirely at the lower back of her head. Then the baldness worked its way up. "It was falling out all over the place, and I lost it all in the back," she remembers. It never grew back.
Izatt struggles a bit with her partial eyebrows and eyelashes. As for the hair on the rest of her body, she jokes, "good riddance." It's been easy, she admits, partly because her husband Daimian tells her she's beautiful. And she was familiar with the condition, which her little brother has had for seven years. He, too, copes well and talks readily about the condition.
"I teach special education and I've taught for years this is who we are and let's embrace what's different and learn to work with things that are difficult. Now I'm doing that," Izatt says.
Chassin says she was helped immeasurably when she met other women who had alopecia areata. "That was a turning point. It lifted my mood. I hadn't realized how alone with it I felt."
That feeling of solitude is something she's been trying to help other women overcome.
Recent comments
i dont understand why women think of alopiceia as a handicap i love...
david | Nov. 10, 2007 at 1:27 p.m.
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