HAIR LOSS QUESTIONS ANSWERED FROM 13 YEARS OF LIVING IT

You have read everything about hair loss. Every article, every forum, every Reddit thread at midnight. You have Googled yourself into a rabbit hole, sat in waiting rooms, and still walked away feeling like nobody actually answered what you were asking. This is because most of what is out there is about the hair, and your questions are not about the hair.

They are about the invitation you turned down. The mirror you checked before your phone. The stranger you feel like in your own life sometimes. The moment someone says it could be worse and you still cannot feel better.

I have been living this for thirteen years. These are the questions I asked too, and nobody answered them for me either. So here is what I know.

With love ❤️,
YoMo

The Emotional Reality of Hair Loss

  • Because it is not just hair, and part of you already knows that. Hair is one of the ways women signal identity, culture, femininity, and belonging in a world that has very specific ideas about how we are supposed to look. When hair loss happens, it does not just change your appearance. It changes your relationship to yourself in public space. The confidence that starts to crumble is not vanity. It is the working assumption that you are allowed to take up space, that you belong in the room, and that people are seeing you, not your hair. When that assumption breaks down, everything that was built on top of it starts to shift too. None of that is shallow. It is real, and it deserves to be treated that way.

  • Yes, what you are feeling is grief. Grief for the version of yourself you expected to keep being, for the ease you had before you had to think about this every single morning, for the spontaneity that disappeared when every outing became a logistics calculation, for the photographs you avoided and the moments you were not fully present for because part of your mind was somewhere else managing this.

    Grief does not require a death. It requires a loss, and what hair loss takes from women is absolutely worth grieving.

  • Your sense of self was built partly on continuity like the recognizable face in the mirror, the appearance you had grown comfortable presenting to the world, and the physical self that matched who you felt like on the inside. When hair loss disrupted that continuity, it disrupted more than your appearance. It disrupted the coherence between who you feel like and who you see looking back at you.

    That gap is genuinely disorienting. Feeling like you lost yourself is not an exaggeration. It is exactly what it feels like when those two things stop matching.

  • Hair loss does not have a script. When you go through a divorce or a job loss or a death, the people around you have some idea of how to show up. When you lose your hair, most people do not know what to say, so they say nothing. Or they say the wrong thing. They recommend a product, or they tell you it is not that bad, or they change the subject faster than you can finish the sentence.

    The silence is not indifference. It is discomfort. But when you are the one living inside it, it does not feel any different. You are carrying something real with nowhere to put it down.

Why Your Brain
Won’t Let It Go

  • Your brain has decided your hair situation is a threat that needs constant monitoring, and it is just doing its job. This is not overthinking. It is your nervous system working exactly the way it was built to work. The problem is that it found something that does not resolve, so the monitoring never gets to turn off. You are checking mirrors, calculating visibility, replaying interactions to figure out if anyone noticed, choosing seats and angles and hats and lighting, and all of that is happening automatically now, below the level of conscious thought.

    Please know that that is not you being dramatic. That is you having adapted to something that asked a lot from you, and those adaptations running in the background of everything you do.

  • It changes your behavior, and changed behavior over time can feel impossible to separate from a personality change. The woman who used to be spontaneous and now needs three days of prep before anything unplanned is not a different person. She is the same person who built a very elaborate coping structure that now runs underneath everything.

    The warmth, humor, and confidence are still there. They are just working around something that is taking up a lot of space.

  • Most appearance insecurities are stable. You know where you stand with them. They might cause discomfort but they do not shift on you unpredictably. Hair loss is progressive and variable, which means the threat never fully resolves and the finish line keeps moving. You also cannot control it the way you can manage other things about your appearance. It brings grief, loss of control, medical uncertainty, and social invisibility all at the same time. And unlike most other appearance concerns, hair loss carries real social stigma. It reads as illness, or aging, or some kind of diminishment that the people around you do not know how to respond to gracefully. The weight of it is categorically different from anything else most women have had to carry in this way.

  • Hair loss is a medical condition, but the psychological weight of living with it is a legitimate mental health concern that is significantly under-addressed. Research consistently shows that women with hair loss experience higher rates of anxiety, depression, social withdrawal, and reduced quality of life. The psychological impact is often disproportionate to the degree of loss, meaning a woman with moderate thinning can carry the same level of distress as a woman with severe loss, because the distress is about identity disruption and loss of control, not the square footage of your scalp. If you are struggling, what you are experiencing is real and it is backed by evidence. You deserve support that addresses it.

  • Women are living inside a different cultural contract. Feminine identity has been tied to hair across virtually every culture for as long as anyone can remember. Hair loss in men has a whole social structure around it, scripts, humor, famous bald men, a cultural acceptance that was built over time. Hair loss in women has none of that. It reads as illness, or aging, or some failure of femininity, and women absorb that feedback in ways men typically do not.

    The grief is different because the stakes are different and that is not weakness. That is an accurate reading of a world that has a lot of catching up to do.

  • It can, and the reason goes deeper than appearance. Confidence is not just about how you look. It is about how much space you feel allowed to take up in a room, how present you are in your own life, how freely you make decisions that have nothing to do with your hair. When hair loss starts running in the background of everything, it quietly chips away at all of those things over time without you even realizing it is happening.

    The women I work with are not lacking confidence in general. They are confident at work, in their relationships, in their opinions. What hair loss does is create a very specific and targeted shift that shows up in the moments that feel most visible, most documented, and most permanent, and over time those moments accumulate into a version of yourself that is smaller than the one you actually are.

    Building confidence while living with hair loss is not about learning to love what you see in the mirror. It is about removing hair loss from the equation of how much of your life you get to show up for, regardless of where your hair is on any given day. That is the work we do here.

  • There is, and nobody warned me. I started Hair Loss Bonita in 2020 after over a decade of navigating androgenic alopecia, and then in 2024 perimenopause arrived and my relationship with my hair shifted all over again. Just when I thought I had figured out how to live inside this, my body had other plans.

    The hormonal changes that happen during perimenopause can directly affect hair growth, and for many women hair loss accelerates or shows up for the first time during this stage of life. The Cleveland Clinic has a helpful explanation of the medical side if you want to understand what is happening in your body, which you can find here.

    What I can speak to is everything that comes after the medical explanation, the part where you close the browser tab and still have to figure out how to live inside all of it.

    Perimenopause is already a lot on its own. Your sleep changes, your mood changes, your body starts doing things on its own timeline, and somewhere in the middle of all of that your hair starts shifting too. I did not build this space for the woman who is supposed to just accept it and move on. I built it for the woman who is navigating all of this at the same time and cannot find a single place that holds it honestly. If that is you, you are in exactly the right place.

How Women Find
Their Way Back

  • Hair Loss Bonita is for the woman who has been quietly reorganizing her life around her hair loss and is ready to name that and do something about it. She shows up at work, she manages her life, she looks completely fine from the outside, and she has built a concealment routine so thorough she stopped recognizing it as one a long time ago. She is done figuring this out alone and she is not looking for a product recommendation or a treatment protocol. She is looking for language for what she has been carrying and a community of women who already understand it without her having to explain it from the beginning every single time. If you are Latina, there is a specific and honored place for you here too.

  • The Hair Loss Bonita Circle is a free monthly journaling ritual on Zoom for women who are done carrying this alone. We meet on the third Sunday of each month at 10am Central for 45 minutes, you show up with a notebook and a pen, and we write together around prompts that have nothing to do with hair and everything to do with the life you are building and the woman you are becoming.

    It is not a support group and there is no advice-giving. It is just a room full of women who already understand the hair thing without you having to explain it, writing their way back to themselves together. Sign up here.

  • You are already thinking about your hair and you have not even gotten out of bed yet. That is where we start. We go after the specific moment or pattern that has been taking up more space in your head than you want it to, the event you are dreading, the conversation that keeps replaying, the identity questions that will not settle down, and I help you understand what is actually happening beneath the surface so you can move through it differently instead of managing your reaction to it every single time. It is practical, grounded work based on what actually moves things, not theory, and it comes from thirteen years of navigating exactly what you are navigating.

    Jessica said she went from crying every single day to feeling a sense of control. Jamie said she felt more grounded and better able to apply what she learned not only to her hair loss but to everyday situations in her life.

    You leave with a clear plan and less of yourself spent on your hair. If you are ready, you can book your session right here.

  • No. The work here is entirely focused on the identity, behavioral, and emotional dimensions of living with hair loss, not the medical ones. I am a certified life coach with a master's degree in counseling, and a Latina woman who has navigated androgenic alopecia and telogen effluvium for thirteen years. I do not practice therapy and this is not therapy. I work alongside your dermatology care, mental health support, and any other care you are already receiving, not instead of it. If you have not yet seen a dermatologist or trichologist, that is worth doing because understanding what is happening medically is useful. If you are working with a therapist or counselor, this work sits alongside that too. This is the support that exists in the specific space hair loss occupies, the part that does not always come up in a therapy session and rarely comes up in a medical one, for when you come home and still have to figure out how to actually live inside the experience.

  • To be clear, I am not a therapist and this is not therapy. I am a certified life coach with a master's degree in counseling who does not practice clinically, and a Latina woman who has lived with androgenic alopecia and telogen effluvium for thirteen years. A therapist addresses psychological health broadly using clinical frameworks within a licensed scope of practice. This work is specific to hair loss, the identity shift, the behavioral patterns, the emotional weight that does not come up in most clinical settings because most clinicians were not trained to look for it there. What I bring is lived experience, professional coaching training, and an unusually specific familiarity with exactly what this experience costs women. A lot of women work with both a therapist and with me because they serve completely different functions, and there is absolutely room for both.

  • You are already in the right place. Hair Loss Bonita was built for you, and I am the woman who has lived this, studied this, and built a whole movement around helping women like you reclaim their confidence and their lives from hair loss.

    Start wherever you are right now. If you want community, join the Hair Loss Bonita Circle, a free monthly journaling ritual for women who are done carrying this alone. If you want to ease in first, get on the weekly letter list and every Monday you will get something that gives you language for what you have been carrying. If you are ready to go deeper, book a one-on-one session and we will get to work on the specific moments and patterns that are costing you the most.

    There is no wrong entry point. You do not need to have it figured out before you reach out. You just have to be ready to stop letting hair loss decide how much of your life you get to show up for. That is where we start.

    If you have any questions, please reach out at hello@hairlossbonita.com. I will get back to you personally.

About Hair Loss Bonita & Working with YoMo

  • Acceptance is an internal shift in how you relate to what is happening. Hiding is learning to manage it so well that you stop noticing you are doing it. From the outside they can look exactly the same. A woman who has genuinely accepted her hair loss can walk into a room without dreading it. A woman who is hiding from it has just gotten very good at managing the dread before she walks in.

    The difference shows up in the decisions that still feel heavy, in the situations that feel impossible versus the ones that feel fine, in how much of yourself you are spending just to get through a regular day. Acceptance is not resignation. It is getting to a place where hair loss is part of your story but it is no longer the one writing your choices.

  • You start by naming exactly how your life is already organized around it. Most women have never done this out loud because the avoidances have become so automatic they feel like preferences rather than adaptations. So make the inventory concrete. Which invitations are you declining, and what calculation are you running when you decline them? Which photos are you opting out of? Which friendships take more out of you than others because of how visible you feel? Which situations at work feel weighted in ways that have nothing to do with the actual work? Once the inventory is named, you can start responding to each thing deliberately instead of automatically. It does not shift all at once. It shifts one reclaimed decision at a time.

  • Start by knowing what you actually need from the conversation before you have it, whether that is to be heard, to be understood, or to find a specific kind of support. Most partners struggle with these conversations because they want to fix the problem and there is no fix to hand them. Give them a specific role instead. Tell them you do not need them to solve it, you need them to understand what it costs you. Make sure you are specific about the behavioral reality rather than just the emotional one. Saying you turned down the wedding because you did not have the energy to manage how you felt about how you looked that day is something a partner can actually hold. Saying hair loss makes you feel terrible is harder for them to do anything with. The specificity is what builds the bridge.

  • Yes, and I am not saying that to make you feel better. I am saying it because I have been on the other side of this, and I have walked women through it. Feeling like yourself again does not mean your hair comes back or the situation resolves. It means you stop needing the situation to resolve before you give yourself permission to show up. It means you say yes to the invitation without the three-day preparation. It means you are in photographs again.

    Getting there is not passive. It is real identity work. It is naming what was taken, grieving it properly, and rebuilding the relationship between who you are and what you look like on your own terms. It is absolutely possible. I am living proof of it.