Bald in the Land of Big Hair: A True Story

LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL even when it has a little cancer in it.

“Thoroughly enjoyable, idiosyncratic, and funny . . . an uplifting celebration of life.”—Daily Mail

It’s not easy to live your best life as a bald girl in Houston, Texas, Big Hair capital of the Western World. Diagnosed with blood cancer at age thirty-two, Joni Rodgers—the aspirational mom of a rambunctious five-year-old girl and a scary-smart seven-year-old boy—stepped into the crucible of chemotherapy determined to laugh, stay sane, and leave a handprint of lovingkindness that would sustain her family through a lifetime she would probably not be there to witness. Juggling motherhood, marriage, and a pipe dream she refused to give up on, Joni embarked on an emotionally and physically tortured two-year journey of treatment and self-reinvention, astonished to discover that the monster trying to kill her would ultimately teach her how to live.

"1004403246"
Bald in the Land of Big Hair: A True Story

LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL even when it has a little cancer in it.

“Thoroughly enjoyable, idiosyncratic, and funny . . . an uplifting celebration of life.”—Daily Mail

It’s not easy to live your best life as a bald girl in Houston, Texas, Big Hair capital of the Western World. Diagnosed with blood cancer at age thirty-two, Joni Rodgers—the aspirational mom of a rambunctious five-year-old girl and a scary-smart seven-year-old boy—stepped into the crucible of chemotherapy determined to laugh, stay sane, and leave a handprint of lovingkindness that would sustain her family through a lifetime she would probably not be there to witness. Juggling motherhood, marriage, and a pipe dream she refused to give up on, Joni embarked on an emotionally and physically tortured two-year journey of treatment and self-reinvention, astonished to discover that the monster trying to kill her would ultimately teach her how to live.

7.99 In Stock
Bald in the Land of Big Hair: A True Story

Bald in the Land of Big Hair: A True Story

by Joni Rodgers
Bald in the Land of Big Hair: A True Story

Bald in the Land of Big Hair: A True Story

by Joni Rodgers

eBook

$7.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL even when it has a little cancer in it.

“Thoroughly enjoyable, idiosyncratic, and funny . . . an uplifting celebration of life.”—Daily Mail

It’s not easy to live your best life as a bald girl in Houston, Texas, Big Hair capital of the Western World. Diagnosed with blood cancer at age thirty-two, Joni Rodgers—the aspirational mom of a rambunctious five-year-old girl and a scary-smart seven-year-old boy—stepped into the crucible of chemotherapy determined to laugh, stay sane, and leave a handprint of lovingkindness that would sustain her family through a lifetime she would probably not be there to witness. Juggling motherhood, marriage, and a pipe dream she refused to give up on, Joni embarked on an emotionally and physically tortured two-year journey of treatment and self-reinvention, astonished to discover that the monster trying to kill her would ultimately teach her how to live.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940165827365
Publisher: Joni Rodgers
Publication date: 03/31/2022
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 655 KB

About the Author

NYT bestselling author Joni Rodgers grew up performing in a family bluegrass band and spent her early career doing plays, music, and voiceovers. Her voice was featured on over 3,000 radio and TV commercials and special programs, many of which she also wrote and produced. Diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma at age thirty-two, Joni used the chemo downtime to finish her first two novels, Crazy for Trying (MacAdam-Cage 1997) and Sugarland (Bertelsmann 1999), both of which were published to critical acclaim. Bald in the Land of Big Hair (HarperCollins 2001), Joni’s memoir about surviving cancer as a young mom, was an international bestseller and perennial book club favorite. Celebrities and other extraordinary people began asking her to help them tell their stories. As a ghostwriter and story consultant, Joni specializes in high-end memoirs but has collaborated on a wide range of projects including a long string of fiction and nonfiction bestsellers and an Oscar-nominated screenplay. She lives on the Pacific Coast with her husband, multimedia artist Gary Rodgers.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter One Lunch at the Premonition Café

Men argue. Nature acts.
— Voltaire

Right off, I discovered the best way to handle the heat of a Houston summer: go to Montana.

Helena is the closest thing I've ever had to a hometown. I wasn't born there, but my children were, and my parents still lived there, along with my big sister and her family and my little brother and his wife. I'd lived there more than I'd ever lived anywhere else and couldn't bear to be away from the mountains for more than twelve months at a stretch. Fortunately, I was able to finance a trip home every year by returning to my old summer job at Grandstreet Theatre, where I taught kindergarten, first-, and second-grade creative drama classes. For two weeks every year, I played the Whoosh-Whoosh game and led my merry little band of jumping beans on imaginary journeys through jungles and dragonlands and mysterious kingdoms where you could become a different person just by changing your hat. (Nice work, if you can get it.)

But this summer, my whoosh-whoosh energy was a little low. After class the first day, I went home and crashed on the couch at my parents' house. When my mom came home from work a little while later, she settled an afghan over me and laid her hand on my forehead for a moment. I'm well acquainted with that universal gesture of motherly concern (the palm of my hand, I like to brag, is accurate to within a tenth of a degree).

I knew I should open my eyes and tell her I was fine, but it was such a lovely feeling.

Being tucked in. Being a child instead of a mommy, just for that brief instant. So I lay therepretending, feeling alittle guilty but mostly grateful for a modicum of that mama-bear nurturing no one ever gets enough of. Unless they're sick.

Of course, I know anyone you slept with before you slept with your spouse is supposed to be anathema, canceled like a bad check that returns to you stamped NSF for Non-Sufficient . . . um . . . Fellowship. You are to tear this relationship in two, pay the penalty, and never think of it again except in shame and regret.

My folks never approved of Jon, and truth be told, I lie awake contemplating how I'll prevent my own daughter from ever getting involved in such an affair. I was a twenty-year-old disc jockey. He was about forty, stood four inches shorter than I, and introduced me to orgasms, antisocialism, and acid. The relationship had had such a profound effect on my life, it was almost unbearable to realize I was barely a blip on his radar screen. For years, the sting of it was such that I wouldn't speak his name. On the rare occasions I did allow his memory to intrude on my consciousness or my conversations, I referred to him only as “the gimlet.”

I honestly thought he was out of my system, but when I sat down during “Reading Rainbow” to write my first novel, it accidentally turned out to be the story of a young disc jockey (me) who falls in love with an aging rancher (gimlet). The original outline ended in humiliation and death for the old sod. But somehow, as the story told itself to me and I told it to the keyboard, the fairy-tale characters performed reconstructive surgery on true life. The fictional man convinced me to forgive the real thing, and the fictional girl reminded me that I didn't love Jon because I was an idiot. I loved him because he was, and is, a remarkable person.

“Call me later,” he said the day he broke my heart, “just so I know we're cool.”I'm fairly certain he didn't mean twelve years later, but I decided to call, anyway, to ask his forgiveness and offer mine. We ended up talking for hours, and by the time we hung up, we were cool. Old flames smoldered down to old friends. I sent Jon a copy of the manuscript he'd helped inspire, and we agreed to meet for lunch while I was in Helena.

Montana was sunny and arid and Russel Chatham–

watercolor beautiful that day, as it is most days in high July. The theater-school session was almost over. The children and I were putting the finishing touches on our musical adaptation of Where the Wild Things Are. After class, I helped them gather their magic carpet squares, construction paper Hobblegobs, and other take-home items, dispensing Tootsie Pops and good-bye hugs as I shooed them out the door.

Slumped in a booth at Bert 'n' Ernie's half an hour later, frowzled by a full morning of Quacknoodles and papier-mâché, I waited for Jon to mosey in with his long ponytail and funky attire reflecting his Native American blood and a sturdy tradition of too much sun, country music, and alcohol. But time and miles were beginning to show on him; his hair was cropped to a respectable collar-length, and the crinkles that used to be only for laughing were now set in stone. He'd taken an early retirement. He was sick. Some kind of heart problem.

“Hi there,” he said warmly, and I wasn't sure if I should get up and hug him, so I just said, “Hi there also.”

“Well.” He laid my manuscript on the table and sat down. “I didn't know you had it in you.”

“You think it stinks,” I instantly concluded. “You hate it.” I regretted showing it to him. He was intimidatingly well-read, and I was still feeling fragile about my words.

“No! I didn't hate it at all.”

“It's just a rough draft. Rough drafts are allowed to stink horrendously.”

“It doesn't stink.”

“It stinks...”

Bald in the Land of Big Hair. Copyright © by Joni Rodgers. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments and Forewarningsix
Prologue: BC (Before Cancer)1
1Lunch at the Premonition Cafe10
2Cleopatra, Queen of Denial21
3Lights, Cancer, Action30
4Hairless in Houston40
5Passion Slave: Secret Life of a Lymphomaniac65
6Daughters of the Pioneers79
7The Queen Has Cancer108
8Faith, Prayer, and Platitudes128
9What's a Nice Girl Like Me...150
10Slow Dance with a Good Man157
11Totally Depressing Low-down Mind-Messing Reverse Peristalsis Blues183
12Being a Phoenix194
Epilogue: Life Smarts244

What People are Saying About This

Elizabeth Berg

This is not only a book about cancer, detailing—with remarkable honesty—every aspect of diagnosis and treatment, it's also a book about how to ground yourself in the life you're living. It's about how to let go of false concepts of beauty and of self, and start living a far richer, truer life than you might ever have imagined. This is a very important book.

Reading Group Guide

About the Book

Joni Rodgers lives in Texas, where big hair is a God-given right. It's essential to any waitressing job, prerequisite for a real estate license, as natural as Naugahyde, and as important as Elvis. But at 32, Joni was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and lost her hair to chemotherapy. It's not fun being a bald girl in the Big Hair Capital of America, but Joni managed to hold on to her sanity -- and her sense of humor. With the same amazing ability to laugh at life, and herself, that helped her survive cancer, Joni now recounts her story -- a deeply affecting tale of industrial-strength drugs, healing herbs, love, sex, prayer, kids, career, and the search for a wig that won't make her look like Betty Rubble.

Bald in the Land of Big Hair is the hilarious -- and often heartbreaking -- tale of Joni's journey through the badlands of cancer. From D-Day ["D" for Diagnosis] ("Biopsy is one of those terms that snags on the back of the mind -- like IRS or subpoena"), through the red tape of treatment ("Apparently it was a Christian Science HMO; any kind of medical treatment was against their relgion"), through remission ("Surviving cancer is the same as emerging from any of lifes refiningfires"), Joni tells her story with humor, occasional anger, and unflinching honesty. Yet this powerful, moving story is much more than one person's memoir. It is the story of all of us; of anyone who has faced what seemed the worst that life has to offer -- and won.

Discussion Questions

  1. What do you think of the way Rodgers uses humor in her memoir? How do we use humor to tell stories about our own lives? If this book hadn't been so funny, do youthink it would have been as powerful?

  2. Why does Rodgers place so much emphasis on the hair loss she experienced as a result of her cancer? Is baldness merely a leitmotif or does it carry a deeper meaning? How would you feel if you were to go bald because of illness? Would you choose to disguise the condition?

  3. "For the first time in my life," writes Rodgers after her biopsy, "my life was at the top of my agenda. . . . Women of my generation don't know what to do with that." Do you or women you know feel that they routinely place the needs of others before their own? If so, why? What are the consequences of this kind of selflessness? And why does it take a disease as traumatic as cancer to force a woman to place her own needs first?

  4. Rodgers is honest-often explicitly so-about her experiences: the side effects of chemotherapy, her sex life, her relationships with her children and husband, and her feelings towards others and herself. Does Rodgers's straightforward narrative ever make you uncomfortable? Why do you think she was willing to reveal so much about her private life? Are you this honest with others, or with yourself?

  5. What do you think of the way Rodgers interacted with her children during her illness? Should young children be shielded from the more extreme realities of a parent's illness?

  6. How did cancer effect the Rodgers family as a whole? What are the psychological ramifications of cancer for children, parents, and the extended family? How might dealing with cancer strengthen a family, and how might it tear a family apart?

  7. Cancer profoundly altered Rodgers's spiritual life. She evolved from being a "fair-to-middlin' Christian" to being angry that God had deserted her, to realizing that God was closer to her than ever. "When we can't confine god in a framework of human characteristic, we shroud God in mystery, because the idea of God actually being accessible to us, well, that would mean we are accessible to God. And that's a terrifying concept." What does Rodgers mean by this? Why do we tend to put so much space between God and ourselves? How did Rodgers's suffering change her faith in God?

  8. Rodgers writes about an incident in which a young man turns away from a water fountain she has just used, as if her illness were contagious. How does this scene illustrate the stigma and prejudice attached to long-term illness? How do you think you would react to drinking from the same water fountain as a visibly sick woman-or man? What did this incident teach Rodgers about other kinds of prejudice and her own deep-seated feelings about those less fortunate than she?

  9. Rodgers decided against radiation after her chemotherapy and included in her healing process visits with a shaman and a naturopath. How would you react if a loved one decided against traditional treatments for his or her cancer? Whose decision should this be?

  10. Why do you think Rodgers devoted so much attention to her infatuation with her editor? What do you think the infatuation was really about? Where did the feelings come from, and why were they directed at her editor?

  11. Rodgers writes about a friend of hers whose metatastic breast cancer went undiagnosed-despite her insistence that she was sick-and who ultimately died from the disease. "There are far too many cases like Shannon's, partly because many of us are easily dismissed and sometimes even intimidated by our doctors, partly because many of us have been taught to dismiss ourselves." Do you agree with this statement? How does our society discourage women from focusing on own their physical and emotional health? What can, and should, be done to change this?

  12. Think about your own experiences with cancer in relation to the author's: how she handled her treatment and its side effects, her fears and anger, her family and support network. What did you learn from Joni Rodgers's story?

  13. Rodgers recommends several books about healing and cancer. Would you recommend this book to someone with cancer? Why or why not?

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews