Bald really is beautiful – Miss Alaska shaved head for charity

- Image Credit: JJ Watt facebook
- Image Credit: JJ Watt facebook

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Just three months ago, Debbe Ebben had no hair. On Saturday night, she was crowned Miss Alaska.

 

Ebben shaved her head in March to raise more than $4,000 for the St. Baldrick’s Foundation, which donates money for childhood cancer research. She said she did it to let children who lost their hair because of cancer treatments know that it was OK to be bald.

 

Choosing her words carefully, she said losing one’s hair should be special — whether it’s voluntary or not.

“I wanted to put meaning and emotion behind it, and let them know why I’m doing it — for the kids,” she said. “I’m not shaving it to get attention. I’m not shaving it for publicity. I’m not shaving it because it’s a really easy hairstyle to go with. I’m shaving it for them.”

 

Ebben’s brown hair had grown back to a pixie cut by the time she became the state’s top beauty queen over the weekend, but she says she will likely

keep her hair short when she represents Alaska at the Miss America pageant in January 2013.

 

“I’ll let it do its thing for a while,” she said, laughing. “I’ll consult the hair stylist before I go down.”

 

Ebben was the reigning Miss Chugiak-Eagle River when she picked St. Baldrick’s for the public service project that is required of all Miss Alaska pageant contestants. Baldrick’s gets its name from a combination of the words “bald” and “St. Patrick.” The organization was founded by three insurance executives who turned a St. Patrick’s Day party into a head-shaving event to help children with cancer.

 

Ebben said she got a feel of what the children go through.

“Like children who are fighting cancer, losing my hair was a really emotional experience, and something I hope they only have to go through once in their life,” she said.

 

As she approached the Miss Alaska pageant, she had to decide whether to keep the look. Her drastic haircut had been done in honor of a child, and she decided to let grow back her hair, so that the haircut wouldn’t be mistaken for a gimmick.

 

“I don’t want to be branded as the ‘bald beauty queen,”’ she said.

 

She’s had two haircuts since March, and her hair is 2 inches at its longest.

 

 

 

 

Joling, Dan.  “Bald Really is Beautiful”. Associated Press. 22 June 2012. Web. 

View original article at timesleader.com:

http://timesleader.com/stories/Bald-really-is-beautiful,166764

Spread the love

Leave a Reply