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A renowned medical journalist reveals a new program to stop baldness and restore lost hair that includes nutritional advice, herbal and hormonal remedies, minerals and vitamins, the breakthrough Thymu-Skin, how to clean the scalp properly, and a wealth of other proven tips and techniques. Original.
Educational, uplifting, and thoroughly hilarious, this rollicking “bald memoir” is a one-stop guide to appreciating life as you lose your hair, and offers dating, grooming, marriage, sex, and even toupee advice for bald men and the people who claim to love them. Humorist and comedy television writer Julius Sharpe woke up on 9/11 to his own personal disaster: his hair was falling out. So You’re Going Bald is his hilarious odyssey—a tale filled with despair, horror, acceptance, and humor that everyone can relate to, whether you’re nineteen or approaching ninety—or are simply bald-curious. As Julius tells it, going bald is for-real traumatic. Losing his hair preoccupied his days and kept him up Googling every night for five straight years. He suffered in private, but now he’s making it his mission that no cue ball will live alone with the agony of hair loss ever again. Sharpe examines what it means to be hairless up top, and walks you through how to look at yourself in the mirror and not want to die. He outlines the three stages of baldness (anger, more anger, even more anger), and volunteers himself as a guinea pig, testing laser helmets, plugs, and toupees. So You’re Going Bald is one-part tough love and one-part inspiration . . . the same way that Fran Drescher’s Cancer Schmancer inspired a cure for schmancer. We all know someone who is bald, or going bald, or got their hair cut way too short. In So You’re Going Bald, Sharper provides an emotional roadmap for living life in the bald lane, giving voice to what it feels like to know that “grass doesn’t grow on a busy street.”
A children's book about a boy struggling through his journey with Alopecia.
From the author of the bestselling United States of Japan, and longlisted for the 2015 Folio Prize, Bald New World is a dark exploration of human vanity in a hairless world. What if you woke up one morning and everyone in the world lost their hair? In Bald New World, that very event happens and overnight, religion, politics, and fashion undergo dramatic shifts. Nick Guan and his friend Larry Chao are a pair of eccentric filmmakers who choose to explore the existential angst of their balding world through cinema. Larry is heir to one of the most lucrative wig companies in the world. Nick is a man who's trying to make sense of the tatters of his American Dream. Taking place throughout China and America, the pair set off on a series of misadventures involving North Korean spies, veterans of an African War, and digital cricket fighters. Their journey leads them to discover some of the darkest secrets behind wig-making and hair in a hairless world. ,
A second collection of the author's humorous columns from the Washington Post.
Poised amid a dazzling array of locales and predicaments, the characters in John M. Keller's incisive, original stories become as real and as vivid as the places they inhabit. In "People Like Me Better Because I Like Guacamole," published in Glimmer Train, a Russian grocery store employee with a "box full of discarded dreams" heads to glacial southern Chile to try his hand at advertising copy, just after a gypsy predicts he'll die along the journey. In the title story, the life of a Mexican man with a rare sleep disorder changes irrevocably as he seeks to unravel the mystery of who shaved his head while he was sleeping. Keller captures the humor of the peculiar and the pedestrian, and his rich, searing descriptions and labyrinthine plots charge these twelve stories with an electric and unequivocally human pulse. This is the first collection of stories from a bold new voice.
Billy is five years old and bald because of side effects of his cancer treatment. Billy's teacher helps the other children understand that just because he is bald on the outside doesn't mean that he is any different on the inside.
Finally! A book that honestly tells the story of a man losing his hair and doesn't want to give up his life, vigor, and confidence chasing a fix! Men wonder if life can continue to get better after hair loss begins. All of the media tells us we must fix it! But how can this be true? We see men covering up their hair loss with a variety of solutions and going around in circles! Then we see bold, bald men move forward; not letting the hair loss matter to them at all!How can this radical difference be understood? Through the real life story of Max DaSilva and his determined studies and communications with thousands of balding men, we find the thing that was missing in hair loss solutions was the human element! What does a man have to feel in order to decide to go bald? What does it feel like to get dissed by your loved ones for being bald? How do you handle your girl saying she liked you with hair better? These super sensitive topics were never discussed anywhere before! Max takes the time to talk about these moments in his life where hair loss began to affect his confidence and mental state... And carries you with him as he made IMPORTANT decisions which lead him to be confidently bald and not have to give up ANYTHING he loved in life... in fact life only got better! Once Max took on the actions and beliefs laid out in this book, he was overflowing with confidence and energy. He shared his ideas on his YouTube channel and began affecting his fellow balding brothers who needed the motivation!We have been told LIES about hair loss our entire lives. We can finally read the lessons learned by a balding man who is actively in the trenches of 21st century life with social media.This book is the roadmap from hair loss making you feel like you are losing your life altogether to absolutely embracing your baldness as an important part of your story to becoming the most attractive version of yourself that you have an obligation to be! These words are backed by the men who took the risk of buzzing their head and never looked back. Their relationships got better, they hit new goals, and life got brighter. This book speaks to you wherever you are; whether it be the first time you realize you are losing your hair or right after you just had a date and the girl says she likes men with good hair. Growing Bald: The True Way To Deal With Hair Loss covers the following: -When is the best time to buzz your head -What is the best length to start with -How to tell people about your hair loss-How to respond to insults and disses -How to get more attractive with your bald head-What mindset will actually make this happen-How to stand out amongst the men you have seen lose motivation If you want to get a head start on your own personal revolution, then search "Max DaSilva Hair Loss" on Youtube
Pam Fitros has found a life calling to educate others about Alopecia, whether through the curious looks of a child in the grocery store or on these pages. Her words are as warm as a personal letter just for you. She will love you into understanding the challenges of women with Alopecia. Pam Fitros says, "My baldness is what I have that makes me different." This isn't the only thing which sets Pam apart from others. Her tenaciously coated, loving heart spills out on these pages to inform, entertain and encourage. Boldly Bald Women will help anyone facing the challenges of Alopecia find courage to face and alleviate personal fears and find they are not alone on this journey. Carry-on Ladies... with confidence, personal fortitude, guts and persistence. As a woman of hair who complains about and uses bad hair days as an excuse... I now have a new definition of courage: "to unwrap ones head of all disguises and walk boldly into the world." Now I'm wondering, is my hair holding me back?
What are laws, and do they necessarily have any basis in morality? The present work argues that laws are governmental assurances of protections of rights and that concepts of law and legal obligation must therefore be understood in moral terms. There are, of course, many immoral laws. But once certain basic truths are taken into account – in particular, that moral principles have a “dimension of weight”, to use an expression of Ronald Dworkin’s, and also that principled relations are not always expressed by perfect statistical concomitances – the existence of iniquitous laws poses no significant threat to a moralistic analysis of law. Special attention is paid to the debate between Ronald Dworkin and H.L.A. Hart. Dworkin’s over-all position is argued to be correct, but issue is taken with his argument for that position. Hart’s analysis is found to be vitiated by an impoverished conception of morality and also of the nature of government. Our analysis of law enables us to answer three questions that, at this juncture of history, are of special importance: Are there international laws? If not, could such laws exist? And if they could exist, would their existence necessarily be desirable? The answers to these questions are, respectively: “no”, “yes”, and “no.” Our analysis of law enables us to hold onto the presumption that so-called legal interpretation is a principled endeavor, and that some legal interpretations are truer to existing laws than others. At the same time, it accommodates the obvious fact that the sense in which a physicist interprets meter-readings, or in which a physician interprets a patient’s symptoms, is different from the sense in which judges interpret the law. So our analysis of law enables us to avoid the extreme views that have thus far dominated debates concerning the nature of legal interpretation. On the one hand, it becomes possible to avoid the cynical view (held by the so-called “legal realists”) that legal interpretation is mere legislation and that no legal interpretation is more correct than any other. On the other hand, it becomes possible to avoid Blackstone’s view (rightly descried by Austin as a “childish fiction”) that judges merely discover, and do not create, the law.