Bald Is Beautiful

16 June 2010 38 Comments

marina bald is beautifulA group of American women got together with the idea of redefining the concept of beauty. Men can be blond, brown, red, white and… bald. Why not women? I photographed them in New York as they were that day and I collected their stories too. Some of them have alopecia, some have been through chemotherapy, others simply like being bald.

When I showed the pictures to my clients, every single magazine  that saw the story (about twenty) refused to publish it for the very same reason: those pictures might clash with the feminine ideal supported by advertisers. Well, actually one of them had a different problem…

Time passed and I kept trying with other magazines. No way to publish the story. Mainstream magazines have a preference for the Barbie-fication of women, we know that. Anyway, now I am publishing everything on my blog. Meeting those women has been a privilege for me, I want other people to be inspired by them too. After all, their point is not just about bald women. Having the courage to be oneself is a topic that concerns everyone.

caggie bald is beautifulCaggie, fashion designer

At the age of eight, children are at an important threshold in the process of growing up. They have realized that Santa Claus does not exist, they socialize differently and are increasingly autonomous. My eighth year coincided with the loss of my first tuft of hair and the beginning of an interminable series of doctor appointments. I felt confused and began to withdraw into myself and shut out my feelings. For a long time I was afraid of feeling excluded and to avoid it I hid my head under wigs or scarves. My hair grew back, then it all fell out again, then grew back… The last time it grew back I cut it and now I shave my head every day. I am bald.

There was an episode that helped me a lot. In June 2001 a woman stopped me on the street and asked if I wanted to take part in a radio show. I said yes and in the studio I met another bald woman. But she did not suffer from alopecia areata like me, she simply felt that shaving her head made her feel more important, and whenever she went to a party everyone looked at her admiringly. It was like a revelation to me. I had never before thought that baldness could enhance a woman’s beauty. I was so struck by this that I decided that I would take it as my mission: transform the source of my torment into a declaration of love for myself and make the people around me understand it.

Actually, there have been times when the standards of beauty were different, even regarding women’s hair. For example, in ancient Egypt they completely shaved their heads and in the Elizabethan period they shaved back their hairline to give the effect of a very high forehead. So I said to myself, “If today’s society consider bald women to be twists of nature then it is partially up to me to change things”. My friends and I have stopped covering our heads. We know that even the strangest of things, once they have become familiar, are accepted.

Fury, event organizerFury potographed by Enzo Dal Verme, bald is beautiful

I used to hate the hours spent at the hairdressers grooming my hair and so seven years ago I made a decision and cut it all off. Here I am, I am bald and I want to stay bald my whole life. I see it as a statement: I can express my femininity even without hair.

And then I must say it is convenient: I shave quickly every morning and am ready. Before, if I didn’t have time to fix my hair I was anxious. Now I am free of worry, my head is always perfect even on windy days.

People are generally surprised to see me without hair and often ask a bunch of questions as if it were the most bizarre thing on earth, and it’s true that there aren’t a lot of us. If I go to a restaurant, for example, everyone notes me right away. And so when I don’t feel like attracting so much attention I wear a hat or a turban and mix in with the rest of the people.

Being bald has made me understand how much importance we give to a woman’s hair. Without a do that frames my face or a curl to play with, in a certain sense I am more vulnerable. But it’s not a serious problem, actually it’s stimulating and I would dare say it is something like the way blind people heighten their other senses.

I had not originally thought about women who have become bald as a result of chemotherapy. Now many of them are my friends and I am even happier to shave my head and help spread a fashion that will help them feel normal with their round heads.

Margareth photographed by Enzo Dal Verme, bald is beautifulMargareth, actress and model

Being a woman without hair means being continuously exposed to judgments. In effect, you get the desire to close in on yourself, but I decided to do the exact opposite: I do not avoid people’s stares.

Not having hair has stimulated me to be very aware and careful in my choices. I learned how to transform something that was poisoning my life into my medicine. I don’t wait for someone to make an idiotic comment, I anticipate them, I smile at them and explain what alopecia is. But it wasn’t always like that.

I started having my first boyfriends as a teenager and it was devastating to always have to wear a wig. One summer at the seaside a wave knocked my wig off, leaving me there in the water completely exposed and unprepared to face the curious stares. A boy came to pull me out and said to me, “you’re beautiful without your wig”. Who would ever have expected it? I was embarrassed, but from that moment on, I stopped using it and started feeling that I was beautiful, actually, that was when I started being a model.

I moved to New York and decided to start a career in fashion and show business and two weeks after I got there I was rushed to the hospital where they found a large cyst in the left ventricle of my brain that had to be removed immediately. Coming that close to death gave me even more enthusiasm for life and I very quickly got back on my feet. I especially understood that it is incredibly stupid to worry about what is acceptable to others and what isn’t. There is nothing shameful in being what you are. And when life poses such big challenges you can either run or take advantage of them. I am in favor of the latter option. I continued working as a model, actress and opera singer. I also wrote a play about my inner journey of growth, acceptance and love for myself.

Carolyne, medical studentCaroline photographed by Enzo Dal Verme, bald is beautiful

I’ve been bald ever since I was a baby (alopecia) and it wasn’t easy growing up feeling so different from the other kids. When I was eighteen I went to summer camp. We were encouraged to be curious, socialize and—it had to be a coincidence—everyone kept talking about how important it is to support each other and appreciate our differences. And so one day they challenged us to put all those nice words into practice. For the first time in my life I took off my wig and as soon as I did, a girl cried out, “Fantastic!”

From that day I no longer have any protection because I began to feel truly comfortable with myself as I am. It isn’t always easy. For example, lots of times at restaurants a waiter coming up from behind will ask, “May I get you something, sir?” Only afterwards do they realize that I am a woman. This sort of annoyance happens all the time. Sometimes I get the desire to take a vacation from my baldness and I put on a hat. Recently I also tried wearing a wig again to see what effect it had, but nobody recognized me!

The way I look has in some way forced me to concentrate on my abilities. All those images of attractive women with marvelous hair always made me believe that there was something wrong about me. It’s still a little difficult with boys because I always wonder why they should be attracted to me. But I also know that my shyness does not just depend on my being bald, actually, if my hair started to grow back I think I would probably shave it off. Bald is who I am.

Sharon photographed by Enzo Dal Verme, bald is beautifulSharon, model and actress

I had really long hair that I lost after going through chemotherapy for ovarian cancer. It grew back but I shave it off because I feel more comfortable bald.

This is how it went: I worked for a record label and was so involved in my career that I forgot about … myself! When I realized what was going on, I left my job and took a year off. I did a lot of traveling and thinking. Before I went back to work I went to visit my parents. I was only going to stay a few days but instead I found out that I had cancer while I was there and that was the beginning of my adventure. I met a lot of women who were sick like me. Some were really depressed, while others said things to me like, “cancer saved my life”, or “it was a blessing for me”. You can’t understand these words unless you’ve been through it. When you find out you have that disease you are always thinking about death and you appreciate life much more. You especially realize what it is that is really important for you. I understood that I had to let go of a lot of stupid things and learn things that I had never given any importance to, such as eating well, getting exercise… In other words, cancer taught me to take care of my body, listen to its needs and love myself.

And now that I have survived, I feel the growing need to communicate to as many people as possible that it is important to love oneself. It isn’t easy. For someone like me it really took such a powerful experience to wake me up. But I am determined. I decided to use my image as a bald woman to get people to think and so far things are going very well. I have acted in a few television series, including Sex and the City, and I present myself as an actress with a story, not just with a particular look.

Venus, creative directorVenus photographed by Enzo Dal Verme, bald is beautiful

I fought alopecia with everything I had. The treatments are incredibly painful because you have to repeatedly undergo a large number of injections into your scalp and the results are not always satisfying. Then, when I was twenty-four, something changed. I was on vacation in Jamaica and I saw a very beautiful woman who was completely bald. I said to myself, “You just have to hang in there”. I quit treatment and shaved my head.

Most people think I shave my head to be eccentric and since I have a creative job it is easy to transform diversity into a strength. And so I play on my baldness. Once you accept yourself you feel whole and stop fearing rejection all the time. So I am myself, natural, authentic, and it is important because the others can feel it when you are insecure or are hiding something.

My experience has taught me that beauty is not an aesthetic question, but it is something that you radiate when you feel at peace, you like yourself and you don’t try to be something else. The fact that I feel perfectly normal the way I am dasn’t means that others think that too. Sometimes in the subway people stare at me and I just smile. But it wasn’t always like that. When I was twenty-five I still had to get used to my appearance and so if I was at a party and someone asked why I was bald I would make up incredible stories like, “they gave me a part in Star Wars”, or “I am an African princess and shaving the head is part of the initiatory rite”. I had quite an imagination! If my hair was to start growing again? I think I would go on shaving…

Marina photographed by Enzo Dal Verme, bald is beautifulMarina, police clerk

My husband shaves his head every morning to feel closer to me. He is a policeman and I work at the station. For our daughter it is perfectly normal to have two bald parents.

I lost my hair when I was three years old (alopecia) and I felt really isolated, but not from the other children. They didn’t see my baldness as anything strange, but adults did. They were all afraid that I might give their kids some terrible disease, or else they looked at me compassionately and said “Poor thing!”

There were a lot of times when I asked myself “Why me? Why can’t I have hair like everybody else?” Then I made peace with my life, but it took a long time.

In the end, my head never really caused me any serious obstacles, although being “strange” did create some unease. For many years I covered my head with a scarf, a hat or a wig to avoid unwelcome comments. Then I began to stop hiding myself, and naturally I experienced a number of episodes that wounded me. Once at the bank, a man tried to let me go to the front of the line because he thought I was seriously ill. I was offended, but I have to admit that he had the best of intentions. So, at times you are vulnerable in unexpected ways.

It’s only in the past few years that I feel more comfortable, and I owe it to my daughter. I used to worry that in a moment of distraction or play she might pull off my wig when I held her in my arms. How would I have reacted? How would I have felt? And then when it actually happened it was not so horribly dramatic. Actually, experiencing the thing I had feared brought my fears into perspective.

Then I met many other women like me and I didn’t feel so alone any more. The unconditional love of my daughter and my husband and the closeness of my new friends have given me the strength to feel more and more at peace with myself.

  • austex/mike

    I think all these Ladies are beautiful . I hope their bravery in “bucking the norm” takes on a universal life .Beautiful women shouldnt be hiding in shame behind wigs or any other facade deemed ‘normal’..
    I must admit a little selfishness here I have found the bald woman erotic for years.
    Thanks for posting these wonderful stories and good luck fiding a hard copy out let for them your work should be seen
    austex/mike

    • adakin

      i think that’s just downright gross to be honest. woman have always had hair and it should be that way for years to come. we don’t need a damn conehead/skinhead world.

      • Sheri

        adakin, I’m so sorry these women have offended you, how dare they not consider your feelings when they are dealing with life threatening illnesses and the like.
        I promise they will take your feelings against “damn coneheads/skinheads” into consideration the next time they are standing in front of a mirror watching their hair fall out from something they can not control.
        ……

      • Jenna

        Are you for real, adakin !?
        Most of these woman didn’t CHOOSE to be bald, u know !
        “…woman have always had hair and it should be that way for years to come.” Well, tell that to the ILLNESS or CHEMOtherapy, and plenty of other medications, that causes baldness !!!
        You SERIOUSLY need vitamins and minerals, to hopefully get ur I.Q.-level up, IF you’ve got any at all !

      • jaltha

        No offence but you’re a frikkin idiot and annoying you would be a good reason to take razor to scalp. It does look amazing on some women, it is a powerful statement, it is something everyone should do at least once in their lives.

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  • http://www.raphael.lu raphaeL

    This is AWESOME!!!
    I totally support this and think all of you ladies are stunningly gorgeous and your stories are amazing!
    I am a professional photographer as well and I would like to have each one of you in front of my lens as well !
    Great stuff !!!

    r a p h a ë L – Luxembourg, Europe

  • Heather Fritz

    I am one of these ladies. My hair started to fall out on my husband’s birthday, Feburary 9, 2010 – exactly two weeks after my first chemo treatment. I found a lump in my left breast and suddenly I was fighting for my right to live. I was in the shower and when I pulled two handfulls of hair out, I told my husband that I wanted his help shaving my head that night. He shaves his head and was happy to help. I started it – standing in front of the mirrow with a men’s white tank top on and leaning on the counter and I started shaving my head. I tell people that having your GI Jane moment is empowering and to embrace it and to focus on healing. Who cares that we have no hair!?! I did cry when we were done shaving as it was a shock – are you ever really ready for this heairstyle? Then again, we pay a hairdresser to look “different,” but to shave my own head was weird. Then I took my first bald shower. A shower had never felt so wonderful in my life! It was worth it just for this feeling – this wonderful feeling of hot water pouring over a bald head. I asked my husband, is this what I have been missing?!?! He kissed my head and said, “You have a beutiful head – I love you!” How can some of us be so lucky or blessed, I wondered.

    Now I want to keep it shaved. I slowly stopped wearing something on my head – of course it was winter when I shaved it so it was so cold for so long. I am now excited to have a bald head and I feel like I love myself more than ever. I want other women to learn that they are the only one’s responsible for how they feel – emotionally and physically. And if you give someone else the power to make you feel less than, strange, different, or whatever scares you – you are the only one suffering. The truth is that noone really cares enough about you to make you “feel” anything – people care about themselves, and fitting in. So we should all practice the same – care about yourself and you will care less about what others say… in words or in a stare. I have learned to appreciate the fact that I have nothing to hide behind – learning how to truly be out there is learning to live purely in yourself – something we all need to learn how to do. A beautiful byproduct of loving and accepting yourself is how easy it is to love and help others. Is there really anything else to say?

    • austex/mike

      Im so very Happy to hear that you are accepting your condition and liking it . Be proud of who you are and know that some of us think you are beautiful but some may not show it for fear of staring being mis interpeted , If you were near me i would prove it by taking you out to eat in your radience and being prould to do so
      austex/mike

      • Heather Fritz

        That is very sweet. Thank you!! Bald is a real hair style option for women and I will prove it. I do have to admit and it gets a bit tiring having women come up to me and assume that I am sick, like the lady yesterday at the store. It never occurred to her that I might just be bald because I chose it. So sad for these people. What is a little funny is that her hair was pretty bad :-)

      • kash

        ya ! its true that bald is wonderful for women . bald women look sweet and very attractive as far as i know ! and i need to prove that these statements “bald women are beautiful ” is true . and i want a bald and an attractive wife !! :)

  • http://facebook.com chris

    BEAUTIFUL BRAVE THANKS FOR TAKIN THE STEPS TO HELP YOUNG GIRLS AND ALL TO JUST BE

  • P

    <3

  • http://www.BaldGirlsDoLunch.org Thea Chassin

    Bravo to everyone involved in this important and inspiring project!

    Thea Chassin, founder
    Bald Girls Do Lunch Inc
    The award-winning nonprofit network for women with alopecia areata.
    BaldGirlsDoLunch.org

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  • http://www.myspace.com/beckienigma Becki M

    This article has really moved me. I think these lovely ladies are not only brave, but truly beautiful also :-) What an inspiration.

    To the author – have you tried ZEST magazine? They publish all kinds of stories related to beauty and health. Just a suggestion!

  • France Cantin

    My 15 years old daughter shaved her beautiful hair twice to raise money for cancer research. I think she never looked more beautiful. Beauty is in your dreams, your hope, your passion and your energy. Don’t let cancer take that away from you.

  • http://www.enzodalverme.com Enzo

    @ Heather Thank you for sharing your story
    @ Becki M Thank you for the suggestion, actually I didn’t contact Zest Magazine yet
    @ Shery Thank you for helping me to moderate :)
    @ everyone I am glad that this post is inspiring readers, that’s why I decided to shoot this story!

    • Sheri

      Lol Your welcome, I just can’t stand such letting someone’s ignorance try to destroy such beauty.

  • Naomi Taylor

    well done!!!!!! i lost my hair when i was eleven years old to aloepecia. Total hairloss over my whole body. It has been eighteen years of both good and bad times. I chose not to wear wigs because i felt fake it wasnt the real me. Of course you have the teasing etc but i figure it all just makes you stronger. The amount of money and times i have saved is incredible. You have to make the most of what you have and enjoy it. Kia Kaha all you lovely ladies be proud that you are unique.xxxxxx

  • Joanne

    Thank you so much for this..an inspiring lesson to remember

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  • http://mariateresamelodia.blogspot.com/ maria teresa melodia
  • jerry

    The bald image is very beautiful on women who have the right facial structure and personality to support it. Having no hair, draws attention to a woman’s eyes and lips, which can be very sensuous. Black and white photos of bald women elicit drama and gain more attention because the tonal values are stark and simple. I salute women who have the courage to be hairless and bare all, as their inner beauty shines outward. Finding their inner beauty and loving themselves, is what is most important. I encourage women with alopecia or other medical conditions that affect hair growth, to accept their beauty and walk confidently. All women should feel free to express themselves and explore this bold new image.
    Bald women break out of the box and question the expected and traditional images, that we as a society have been conditioned to believe, makes for an attractive woman.

  • http://art.liefhung.com Fhung

    This is a beautiful story with beautiful photographs about women whose beauty shines from the inside out. I think it is very daring to go completely bald like that. I’ve been shaving my head, although not as completely bald as these brave women do. I have received numerous stares, misplaced sympathies and also admiration from others. Some people found it ugly, disturbing and awkward… I wonder why. Perhaps it reminded them of terminal illnesses? Yet some people found it totally cool and beautiful!

    Well, it is certainly a ‘hair’ style option for women too! I can tell you that it feels very liberating and refreshing!

    Kudos for this touching project! I think you should try New York Times!

  • Mara

    Enzo,
    I came across this website from a friend who has lost her hair to alopecia. This has encouraged her very much!Lovely work!!!

  • http://www.enzodalverme.com Enzo

    It’s great to know that my article is encouraging/inspiring readers. Thank you for all your feedbacks!

  • http://www.don-guitar.com Lisa

    Enzo, thank you for your beautiful photos. A year ago I shaved my head and photographed the results http://www.don-guitar.com/babbleon.html and since then have loved being bald-by-choice.

    I researched all that I could at the time and there was very little information, even on the Web, about bald women. Now every once in awhile, I Google ‘bald women’ or ‘fashion for bald women’ and this time was surprised to find there’s a lot more written and discussed about the subject. It seems the look is becoming more fashionable so that it’s not so startling to people nowadays. I hope I’ve done my part just by example to encourage women to ‘wear your head with pride’ if you want to or have to.

  • austex/mike

    Thank you so much ,Pretty Lady , for sharing you posted photos.. You are beautiful and it seems you and your husband are lucky to have each other..
    I am sure your example jas made it easier for some ladies to accept themselves..
    You and others all remember that some of the “stares” and those trying not to stare are inspired by awe and admiration from those of us you find the style very attractive
    austex/mike

  • Liz

    I’ve also been leaving with hair loss
    since I was 4 years old, after I had my
    son I lost the little bit of hair I had.
    I decided to get a wig when I was in my
    thirty’s now I’m 43 years old, but people
    could tell if you have a wig like this
    lady at my job that came up to me and
    asked me out loud if I was wearing a
    wig that made me depressed and brought
    my self esteem down I just couldn’t wait to get out of there, reading this stories
    gave me strength and made me realize that I shouldn’t care what people think about me as long my son loves me and my family that’s what matters. Thank you very much
    for sharing your stories.

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  • Marla

    I have lost most of my hair due to chemotherapy. Reading all of these stories has made me feel stronger about my baldness. So glad my son sent this article. Thanks again. Bald women are beautiful!

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