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			 In addition to impacting self-esteem, the loss of 
			hair can also lead to additional health issues. For example, hair 
			and head coverings are necessary in the cold months to help retain 
			body heat. The majority of our body heat escapes through our head. 
			So, having hair and wearing head coverings is important when the 
			weather is cold. 
 In addition, hair and head coverings provide shelter from the sun. 
			Sunburn on the scalp can be quite painful. Especially during 
			treatment, it is important to avoid sores and abrasions. So, 
			blistering from sunburn is not something a cancer patient should 
			experience if avoidable.
 
 For some, buying a wig is something that they can’t work into the 
			budget. For those people, the American Cancer Society does offer a 
			solution, a wig bank that is accessible to cancer patients who are 
			income eligible.
 
 Cancer patients can get information about wig banks through the ACS 
			website, but here in Logan County there is an active wig bank where 
			patients can go to a local stylist, choose a wig have it cut and 
			styled to fit their face, and walk out of the salon feeling better 
			about themselves.
 
 Fabulous Hairstyles with owner/operator/stylists Kim Olson and her 
			mother Judy Worth offer this service to any qualified individual who 
			needs a wig.
 
 Olson recently spoke about the wig bank and explained a little bit 
			about what they do at Fabulous. The shop has an inventory of gently 
			used wigs that clients can go through and choose. In addition, the 
			stylists can assist clients in getting wigs through other ACS free 
			resources if they don’t have something suitable in their inventory.
 
			
			 
			
 Once a wig is selected, it is fitted to the client, and styled on 
			their head. Sometimes wigs need a little bit of shaping to fit the 
			face or a length adjustment. Kim and Judy are happy to work with 
			their clients, because they understand the impact this small gesture 
			can make on a warrior.
 
 Judy is a six time cancer survivor, who still struggles from time to 
			time, but doesn’t let it stop her. She helps with the wig bank, 
			actually doing most of it and she also works as a stylist at one of 
			the local senior living facilities.
 
 Kim said there has been a time or two when she and her mom talked 
			about giving the responsibility of the wig bank to someone else, but 
			then something strange and kind of wonderful happened during a 
			fitting one time.
 
 Kim explained that people don’t often see the tops of their heads. 
			It’s practically impossible to get a mirror in a position where one 
			can see the top and a lot of people don’t ever think about trying to 
			look, or having someone else look.
 
 One day Judy was preparing a client for a fitting, and before doing 
			so was looking at the shape of her head and noted something odd 
			looking on the top of her head. It alarmed her enough that she felt 
			compelled to tell her customer there was an odd spot there. She 
			suggested the client might want to speak to her doctor about it.
 
 Sometime later, the client reached out to Judy and said that she 
			wanted to thank the stylist for telling her about the spot. It 
			turned out that when the doctor examined it and did the testing, the 
			spot was an aggressive skin cancer that could have become 
			life-threatening in only a short while. The client thanked Judy for 
			perhaps saving her life from one cancer as she battled to survive 
			another.
 
 Kim said after that, she and her mom knew that they were not ready 
			to pass the torch to another stylist. The care and consideration 
			they give to their clients is important to Kim and Judy, and they 
			want to rest easy knowing that each client is treated with love and 
			respect. In addition, they know that not everyone would have seen 
			what Judy saw. Giving their clients that little extra bit of 
			attention is why Judy and Kim both keep doing what they do.
 
 Karen Hargis remembers when her best friend lost her hair; it was a 
			tough thing to go through. But the situation was made better when 
			her friend was able to go to Fabulous Hairstyles in Lincoln and get 
			a wig through the American Cancer Society Wig Bank.
 
 “My best friend had cancer and was losing her hair and went to 
			Fabulous Hairstyles and tried on wigs. They had plastic tubs full of 
			wigs in every color and length. She picked one out that was close to 
			her regular hairstyle and Kim cut and shaped it to look so natural.
 
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            "I can’t tell you what this service did for her 
			self-esteem. It’s an amazing service. And while American Cancer 
			Society supplies most of those wigs for free, Kim and Judy at 
			Fabulous have such a compassionate hearts for those going through 
			cancer. They have been there and know the struggle.” 
            Karen also noted that when her friend left her, the 
			wig she had gotten from Fabulous was donated back to the wig bank 
			along with a second wig that her friend had purchased.
 Nila Smith also had a close friend who went through the loss of 
			hair. She remembers how hard it hit her friend, and the impact it 
			had on Nila as well.
 
 “She was a strong woman, unshakable in just about every situation. 
			She took her cancer battle seriously and was determined that it 
			would not take her life. She fought hard and for a bit, it seemed 
			that she might succeed. Then she developed metastatic breast cancer 
			of the brain, and it was downhill from then on.
 
 “Even as her condition worsened though, she was still a fighter and 
			she stayed a fighter to the very last day. I seldom saw her fall 
			apart or get angry over what she was going through, with one 
			exception. I remember it so clearly, we had talked earlier in the 
			day as we did every day. But on that particular evening, I was at 
			home and she called me. She was crying hard and it took a while for 
			her to relay to me that she had gone to wash her hair and a bunch of 
			it came out.
 
 “She was one of those people that her hair defined her. She had a 
			light complexion with freckles and bright red hair that she loved. 
			She always looked younger than she was because of her coloring. It 
			gave her that little girl look all the time.
 
 “Through the tears she talked about her hair and how devastating it 
			was to have it leave her. Then as the tears finally subsided she 
			said to me, “you have to come cut my hair.” Then it was my turn to 
			sob hard, I didn’t think I could do it in spite of the fact she was 
			my best friend. “I don’t think I can do it,” Nila said. She replied, 
			“I don’t think I can either. That’s why it has to be you. I don’t 
			want anyone else to go through this with me, it has to be you.”
 
 “So, I got in the car and drove to her house that night. We did it 
			in her kitchen and we snipped and bawled and snipped and bawled all 
			the way through it. When we were finished she had only about a 
			quarter inch of hair all over her head, and the spots where hair had 
			come out were quite visible.
 
 “For the next few days she wore scarves and hats, but after about a 
			week, all the hair was gone and she was completely bald. Then one 
			day she showed up wearing this cute little red wig. I had worried 
			about her going into a depression over the loss of her hair, and 
			knew if she did, she might give up. But the wig, well it was the 
			next best thing for her. She had chosen red, of course, and had it 
			styled similar to her own hair. Yes, you could tell if you knew her 
			well, that it was a wig, and not entirely the same, but close enough 
			that it revived the fight in her, and helped her keep her dignity.”
 
 Attitude is so very important when someone is battling any kind of 
			illness not just cancer or breast cancer. When there is something 
			that can be done to improve the attitude and lighten the load of the 
			heavy burden a patient carries, it should be done.
 
            
			 
            
 Wigs are not for everyone. A number of women chose not to go the wig 
			route because a wig can be hot, sometimes hard to keep on and just 
			in general a nuisance. To each it is their prerogative. Some choose 
			caps or scarves and others feel that their bald head helps define 
			them in this particular stage of their lives. The bottom line, do 
			what is right for you, do what makes you stronger and makes you a 
			better, tougher warrior.
 
 For those who are interested in obtaining a wig, the American Cancer 
			Society does offer some information, but we suggest here locally 
			that you visit Kim and/or Judy at Fabulous Hairstyles in Lincoln. 
			They will treat you with love and respect and will assist you in any 
			way they can.
 
 If you have a warrior who has left you and you wish to do good for 
			others, Fabulous will also accept wig donations for the ACS wig 
			bank.
 
 [Nila Smith]
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