By Staff Sgt. Susan L. Davis
319th Air Base Wing Public Affairs
6/6/2013 - GRAND FORKS AIR FORCE BASE, N.D. -- Senior Airman Taylor Lilley has a heart for service to others.
The 24-year-old native of Lynchburg, Va., grew up in a household where
volunteering for a variety of projects and organizations, as well as
church mission trips, was a way of life.
That's why when her mother, Millie McDowell, was diagnosed with cervical
cancer in 2010, just one week after Lilley's arrival at Grand Forks
AFB, she determined she still wanted to do something to help others
around her in their fight against cancer, even if it couldn't directly
benefit her mom.
"I personally struggled with being so far away and not being able to
help her as much as I wanted to while being in Grand Forks," Lilley
said. "It occurred to me that just because I couldn't help her as she
underwent treatment, there would surely be other cancer patients in the
local area that I could assist."
That is what led Lilley to volunteer at the Altru Cancer Center in the city of Grand Forks once a week.
There, she noticed a concerning trend: a few patients were unable to pay
for their own meals at the hospital. When she brought it to the
attention of the nurses, they offered to pay for the meals out of their
own pockets.
After seeing this, Lilley came up with an idea for a fundraiser that would help support the patients.
"Senior Airman Alan Phair (319th Security Forces Squadron) and I ordered
wristbands and sold them for $5 each, resulting in a profit of more
than $500," she said. "We chose wristbands because it was cost effective
and could yield a higher profit margin. We also hoped the idea would
catch on quicker when people witnessed others wearing them in support of
cancer awareness."
For her efforts, Lilley was presented the Diamond Sharp Award and an Air
Force Achievement Medal shortly before her humanitarian reassignment to
the 633rd Security Forces Squadron at Langley AFB, Va., to be near her
mother, whose condition has taken a turn for the worse.
After numerous bouts of chemotherapy and radiation treatments and
back-and-forth assessments of remission and re-diagnosis, the cancer
turned malignant and began spreading to other organs in her body. Her
diagnosis is now terminal.
Lilley said her family is managing the situation the best way they know
how; her brother has returned home after completing his service to the
Navy, and her father takes time off work to help her get to and from her
medical appointments. Lilley is also doing her best to help support her
mother, with the help of her new unit.
"My squadron here has been very supportive by allowing me time off to
help my family," she said. "It is immeasurable how much it means to me
to just be able to spend time with her."
Lilley said her passion for helping people continues to live on.
"I hope that I will be able to raise awareness at Langley AFB for cancer
awareness to support the local patients here," she said. "Because of my
schedule and frequent trips to Lynchburg, I'm struggling to find the
time to get it started, but it will happen one day. My mom's strength
and struggle motivate me further, and have shown
Sunday, June 09, 2013
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