What It's Like To Relapse
First it's just some nice, gentle tugging. It feels good, you tell yourself, and you're not actually pulling. You go about your business. And as you work, your free hand keeps tugging, ever so slowly, you pull just a little harder, but it's okay. You're not losing any hair. It's fiiiine, you tell yourself, and you add just a bit more pressure.
I haven't pulled for weeks! You tell yourself as a sharp poke at your scalp marks the separation of hair from your head. I'm stressed! I deserve it!
You focus on your work, barely noticing how your idle left hand continues to tug.
You glance away from your book and notice for the first time the scattering of fine hairs across your desk. Suddenly, images of ghostly pale, bald scalp flash across your mind's eye, and you pull on your hat, grab your little toys to fiddle with, keep your hands busy, resist the urge, and when your hand reaches up, the hat is there to stop it.
It's okay, you tell yourself. At least you stopped pulling. We're working to fix this. But as you return to your work, your scalp burns with sharp phantom pains at the scene of the crime, and the sight of that first dime-sized bald spot, white as bone, flashes through your head again.
You miss ponytails. You remember how much you loved ponytails. No- you never really appreciated ponytails much. But now, now you miss them. You would wear a ponytail every day if you could.
You think about your future, when the hair has grown out. One day you'll wake up and it will be long enough to pull back in a ponytail or a bun. One day you will look normal again without strategic parting. It's a discouraging thought that every day you don't pull is a day closer to that goal but every day you give in is weeks in the wrong direction, but c'est la vie. You pulled yourself into this mess, and you have to deal with it to the end.
Dusty Grein
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