“‘I’M LOSING MY HAIR… BUT FINDING MYSELF’” — Melanie Sykes Reveals She’s Lost Two-Thirds of Her Hair to Autoimmune Illness as She Opens Up About Pain, Healing and the Quiet, Gentle Life She’s Growing From Trauma
Melanie Sykes is not pretending everything is fine.
What she is doing, instead, is choosing hope — deliberately, consciously, and sometimes defiantly.
The 55-year-old TV star has shared a deeply personal update with fans, offering a rare glimpse into how she is coping after revealing that an autoimmune condition has left her two-thirds bald and in chronic pain for much of the past year.
Stepping back from the spotlight, Melanie has been documenting her health journey in her own words, refusing to soften the reality — but also refusing to let it define her.
In a recent Instagram video, she appeared calm, smiling softly as she spoke directly to camera.
“I’m actually feeling good,” she said. “I did a guided meditation last night and it reminded me of something simple — even if you don’t feel happy yet, smiling can shift something inside you.”
For Melanie, that small act has become a form of resistance.
She has been open about the physical impact of her condition: ongoing inflammation, extreme fatigue, and significant hair loss. But her latest message focused less on symptoms and more on mindset — a concept she described as post-traumatic growth.
“You can be struggling with trauma and still be growing at the same time,” she explained. “You can be two things at once. I am.”
Melanie described existing in a space where grief and healing sit side by side. Some days are heavy. Others feel lighter. What matters, she said, is allowing both to exist without shame.
“We can move through pain,” she told followers. “We can be changed by it. And I’m living proof of that.”
Earlier this month, Melanie shocked fans by revealing the extent of her hair loss, explaining that her autoimmune illness had accelerated dramatically. She also shared that she was forced to step away from a meditation teacher training course after becoming too unwell to complete it — a moment she described not as failure, but as acceptance.
Since stepping away from television, Melanie has leaned into a more spiritual, inward-focused life. She has spoken about finding comfort in faith, stillness, and learning not to fear the present moment.
“There’s nothing to be afraid of when you’re really here,” she said in another video. “The more I trust that, the more peaceful everything becomes.”
Despite concern from friends and fans, Melanie insists she doesn’t want every conversation to revolve around illness. She is not hiding — she is healing.
“I’ve got that part handled,” she said gently. “I’d just rather talk about life.”
For many watching, that may be the most powerful part of her story. Not the hair loss. Not the diagnosis. But the quiet decision to keep smiling — not because everything is easy, but because she’s still here.
And still moving forward.
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