I woke up to find jagged strands of my hair scattered across my pillow. Uneven and hacked, like someone had cut them in the dark. Panicking, I touched my scalp and found the sharp edge where the hair was missing.
“Caleb!” I shouted, confronting my husband in the kitchen. “Did you cut my hair?”
His confusion turned to denial. “Why would I do that? Maybe Oliver did it.”
Our son, Oliver, fidgeted when I asked. “Dad told me to,” he whispered, leading me to a battered shoebox in his room. Inside were pieces of my life: a dried wedding flower, a photo, strands of hair.
“Daddy said I’d need them to remember you… when you’re gone,” he said, tears brimming.
Shocked, I confronted Caleb. “Why does Oliver think I’m dying?”
He hesitated, then handed me a crumpled paper: Oncology referral. Malignant indicators.
“I didn’t know how to tell you,” he said. “You never want to hear bad news. I thought I could protect you.”
I stared at him, realizing I’d let him take control of my health, my choices.
Later, standing before the mirror, scissors in hand, I cut away the rest of my hair. It felt like reclaiming myself.
That night, Oliver and I turned his shoebox into a memory chest—not for grief, but for hope.
Tomorrow, I’d book the appointment myself. Whatever the outcome, I would fight. Because now, I was ready to live.