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Home > Support & Survivorship > Survivorship > Being a Survivor Bald and BeautifulOur experts offer tips for feeling good about your appearance during treatment.
Shortly after learning she had lymphoma, Hill shaved her head and had her hair made into a wig. And although she doesn't wear it too often -- opting instead for hats -- she has used it for special occasions. In fact, Hill and two of her friends from the Cancer Center, Sarah Cromer and Rachael Asher, agreed that although they all have wigs, they aren't as important to them as they thought they would be. "At first, I still tried to look normal, so I'd wear my wig and make-up, but after a while I just didn't," Cromer said. "Everybody knows you have cancer." The girls, who all chose to be photographed bald, prefer instead to make a different fashion statement: With T-shirts and pins with messages like, Chemo Kid and I have cancer. What's your excuse?
Rachel Asher, 14, loves to read fashion magazines, but she's developed a style all her
own since her cancer diagnosis. Cancer treatments affect people differently -- physically and emotionally. For Zoe Burroughs, 27, the decision to sign up for the Look Good -- Feel Better program came one night when she was getting ready to go out. Look Good -- Feel Better, a program of the American Cancer Society and two cosmetics industry foundations, teaches women how to use make-up, scarves, hats and wigs to feel more like themselves. "I don't wear a lot of make-up generally," Burroughs said, "but I went to put mascara on and I realized I didn't have eyelashes. Clumps were missing." We've assembled tips and different points of view from the experts: Lori Ovitz, an accomplished make-up artist and author of Facing the Mirror with Cancer; Nancy Hissong and Nola Freysinger, volunteer cosmetologists with Ann Arbor-area Look Good -- Feel Better programs; U-M Cancer Center social workers; and current and former patients who know what it's like to try to fake an eyebrow. Here's what they had to say.
Kelsey Hill models a hat.
Sarah Cromer, 16, wore a wig and make-up in the early days of her treatment, but has found
that she's more comfortable going bald than she expected. Many new products have been developed to replace or
supplement traditional wigs, said Jody O'Bryan, a social
work assistant who works in the Cancer Center Wig Bank.
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This article appeared as part of the Summer, 2007 issue of Thrive.
View the issue - note: opens as a .pdf document
University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center © 2008 Regents of the University of Michigan / Developed & maintained by: Public Relations & Marketing Communications. Contact Us or UMHS. The information presented is not a tool for self diagnosis or a substitute for professional care. |
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