The Morning I Woke Up Without Hair
Something felt different the moment I opened my eyes. My head was cold. I reached up, half-asleep, and froze. My fingers touched nothing but smooth skin. Not a single strand.
My heart raced as I stumbled into the bathroom. The mirror showed a stranger—completely bald, eyes wide, lips trembling.
“No…” I whispered, tears spilling before I could stop them.
I sank onto the edge of the bed, my face buried in my hands. I told myself it could be anything—illness, a reaction, bad luck. But deep down, a thought I didn’t want to believe pressed in: He might have done it.
The Phone Call
With shaking hands, I dialed his number.
“Was it you?” I asked.
“What do you mean?” His voice was calm, almost detached.
“I… I have no hair,” I said, my voice breaking.
He sighed. “I’ve told you before—your hair is everywhere. In the bathroom, in the kitchen, in the bedroom. I’m tired of it. Now, there won’t be any more.”
A tight ache filled my chest.
“You can’t be serious,” I said, my voice rising. But he was already explaining, calling it “tidy” and “necessary.”
We went back and forth, but in his mind, he had done nothing wrong. In mine, it was something I couldn’t forgive.
The Decision
At some point, I stopped listening. I knew what I would do.
The first thing I did was pull all his clothes from the closet. I carried them outside and set them on fire, watching the smoke curl upward like a weight lifting from my chest.
Then I went to the bedroom, grabbed the old laptop that had been collecting dust on top of the wardrobe for months, and tossed it straight into the trash.
Next was the treadmill. It had been sitting in the corner for years, untouched. I took it apart piece by piece and dragged it out.
The Last Conversation
That evening, he came home. Irritated. Hungry.
“Why isn’t dinner ready?” he asked.
I met his eyes. “Because I didn’t make any.”
He opened his mouth, but I was already zipping up my bag.
“I’m done cleaning up after you. I’m done pretending. And I’m done with someone who could do something like this.”
I walked out and closed the door behind me. The apartment was silent.
For the first time in a long while, I could breathe.