The Big Shave for the Tiny Brave
MEDIA RELEASE
4.3.2013
The Big
Shave for the Tiny Brave
Two Auckland
mothers, Amy Ockelford and Marika Jones, whose two-year-old
daughters Ella and Charlotte who have both lost their hair
through treatment for leukaemia, are shaving their heads as
part of Leukaemia & Blood Cancer’s Shave for a Cure Week
this week (March 4 – 10).
The pair have decided to
lose their locks to show solidarity with their little girls,
reinforcing ‘bald is beautiful’ at Ludus Gym in Grafton
on March 9 at 10.30 am.
Ella and Charlotte are both
currently receiving chemotherapy for acute lymphoblastic
leukaemia (ALL) at Starship Hospital.
Their mums met
when the two young girls had adjacent beds on the oncology
ward, and have become close as their daughters undergo a
grueling regime of blood tests, lumbar punctures, and
chemotherapy which has side effects including stomach
cramps, nausea and vomiting.
The girls are also neutropenic which means they can have limited contact with other children as they have limited white cells left to fight infection. This means no trip to the playground, no kindergarten and no friend’s birthday parties. It also means frantic trips to Starship for their parents when they develop life-threatening fevers.
Ella and Charlotte are five months apart in age and have become close friends.
“They are bald together, sick together but also happy together sharing occasional play dates on our farm where they are free from potentially harmful human germs,” says Jones.
When Amy and Marika asked their daughters if they were happy for them to shave their heads - they both got a resounding ‘yes’.
“Ella keeps coming up to me saying ‘Mummy no hair today?’ She’s hoping I’ll shave then and there. She lost all her own hair in June. It fell out in big clumps so we cut it into a pixie cut before she lost it all.
“Ella’s beautiful bald - she’s my little warrior. I hope that having other female role models with no hair will give the girls comfort,” says Ockelford.
Both Amy and Marika say they have met some amazing families along the way who also have children battling blood cancers and related conditions.
“It’s a scary and rare normality for us at the moment. We talk about platelets and blood over breakfast.
“Our family has days where we hate cancer, where we can’t go out. At the moment it’s just the little things that are milestones for us like Ella being able to eat a bag of chips,” says Ockelford.
“Amy and I are ready to be vulnerable, as our
daughters are, to shave our beautiful locks to support
Leukaemia & Blood Cancer New Zealand. When we heard about
Shave for a Cure it was the natural fit for both of us,”
says Jones.
Shave for a Cure is Leukaemia & Blood Cancer
New Zealand’s biggest fundraising event. Hundreds of
people across their country will shave this week to raise
money or the 6 New Zealanders diagnosed with a blood cancer
– leukaemia, lymphoma or myeloma, or a related blood
condition every day.
“We are so incredibly grateful to
Amy and Marika for shaving on our behalf,” says Pru
Etcheverry, CEO of Leukaemia & Blood Cancer New Zealand.
“The very many difficulties they face echoes the
challenges of many families we support across the country.
“We are thrilled to see that over 1,800 people have
signed up to Shave, and we hope to see this increasing as
they year progresses,” she says.
Amy and Marika have
already raised close to $6,000 and have a fundraising target
of $10,000. You can visit their profile pages here:
Editors note:
About Shave for a
Cure
Shave for a Cure is Leukaemia & Blood
Cancer New Zealand’s largest fundraising event. Thousands
of people across the country are shaving their heads to
support the 6 Kiwis that are diagnosed with a blood cancer
or related condition every day. This year Shave
Week runs from March 4 – 10.
LBC receives
no government funding and relies on Shave for a Cure to keep
its services free of charge to patients. These include
patient support, support and funding for research into blood
cancers and related conditions, providing education and
information and advocating on behalf of patients.
For
more information visit: www.shaveforacure.co.nz.