In a world where touch often speaks louder than words, a young girl’s struggle with her mother’s alopecia and aversion to hair care left her isolated in her own skin. Years of silent longing for simple affection and the ability to feel cared for through something as intimate as hair braiding shaped a quiet ache deep within her heart.
Then, in a gentle act of kindness from a friend’s mother, that ache found a moment of healing. As the soft braids wove through her hair, so too did a rare thread of love and acceptance, breaking through years of neglect and unspoken pain, leaving her overwhelmed with emotions she never knew she could feel.

My Friend’s Mom Braided My Hair aAnd It Broke Me






Dr. Bessel van der Kolk, author of ‘The Body Keeps the Score,’ states that physical touch is a fundamental human requirement for emotional regulation and secure attachment. In this situation, the mother’s alopecia and subsequent sensory aversion created a significant barrier to the daughter’s developmental needs. While the mother’s condition is a medical reality, her inability to provide grooming or physical comfort resulted in a form of unintentional emotional neglect. The daughter’s intense reaction to a simple braid highlights her biological and psychological yearning for nurturing touch that was never satisfied during her formative years.
The mother’s behavior illustrates how a parent’s personal triggers can inadvertently affect a child’s sense of safety and value. By requiring the daughter to ‘beg’ for help, the mother established a power dynamic where basic care was treated as a burden rather than a natural expression of love. The friend’s mother provided a corrective emotional experience through a simple, mundane task, which highlighted the severity of the daughter’s previous deprivation. The daughter’s fear of appearing ‘strange’ suggests she has learned to suppress her needs to avoid further rejection.
It is my professional opinion that the daughter’s feelings are a valid and healthy response to years of emotional deprivation. She should recognize that her mother’s limitations were not a reflection of her own worth. To move forward, she could consider writing a simple thank-you note to the friend’s mother, focusing on the kindness of the act rather than the trauma it triggered. This allows her to acknowledge the bond without feeling too vulnerable, while seeking therapy to address the long-term effects of her mother’s sensory-driven neglect.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.







The daughter is currently struggling with a mix of gratitude and grief because a small act of kindness reminded her of the care she missed as a child. She is caught between her desire to understand her mother’s medical limitations and the deep pain of being physically neglected for years.
Is it reasonable to excuse the mother’s lack of physical involvement due to her alopecia, or did she fail to meet her daughter’s basic emotional and developmental needs? Should the daughter share her emotional reaction with her friend’s mother to build a deeper bond, or would that be seen as overstepping social boundaries?







