A young woman went to the salon to have her head shaved, since chemotherapy made her hair fall out, but there she experienced something no one foresaw.
For many days in a row, she saw in the mirror a familiar yet altered image: thinning locks scattered across her pillow each night and stuck in her comb each morning. It became unbearable. She grew weary of fighting not only the disease but also this cruel reminder.
– “That’s enough,” she murmured to herself. “If this must happen, I will accept it. Life is worth more.”
She slipped into her favorite sweater, summoned her remaining strength, and walked to the barbershop, where the men working there looked intimidating—with tattoos, piercings, and hard gazes. Still, she knew compassion was hidden under that roughness. They had always treated her kindly, as she’d been coming for years.
The moment she entered, the barbers sensed something was different. She sat heavily in the chair, clutching herself, and whispered with trembling lips:
— Guys… my hair has started to fall out. It’s… the chemo. I can’t bear it anymore. Please shave it.
The shop fell silent. Not a single usual joke arose. The barber, her longtime friend, gave a firm nod, switched on the clippers, and their hum filled the quiet space.
The first locks slid to the floor. She felt the chill of air on her scalp. In that instant, her chest tightened. Tears welled and streamed. Covering her face, she cried:
God… what a loss… my hair… I’ve grown it so many years…
The barber set a gentle hand on her shoulder but couldn’t speak. She shook, like a child stripped of her dearest treasure. It felt as though pieces of her femininity and strength were falling away with each strand.
Then, suddenly, something occured that she could never anticipate.
You are not alone in this.
He lifted the clippers, pressed them to his head, and cut a bold line through his own thick dark hair. The buzzing came again, and his strands fell beside hers.
Her tearful eyes widened in disbelief:
— What are you doing?! Why would you?
Still smiling, he kept shaving.
– “If you’re enduring this, then I will too. Hair returns, but encourage and loyalty matter far more.”
Her sorrowful tears turned into tears of surprise and gratitude. Her shoulders shook, not from grief now, but from overwhelming emotion.
She watched his locks scatter across the floor with hers, and for the first time in months she felt she truly wasn’t alone in this struggle.
Even the other barbers froze, silently watching.
She muttered faintly:
– Thank you… you can’t imagine how much this means to me.
He placed his hand over hers and said softly:
— Look in the mirror. You are beautiful. Not for your hair. You are beautiful because you fight.