By Army Staff Sgt. Mary Junell
North Carolina National Guard
RALEIGH, N.C., Oct. 28, 2014 – On Oct. 12, Army Chaplain
(Maj.) Melissa Culbreth sat laughing and joking in a chair on the front porch
of the farm where she works in Franklinton, North Carolina. The North Carolina
National Guard chaplain’s signature red hair was styled into five braids.
The porch was full of friends, family and fellow soldiers
watching and waiting for the braids to be cut off and collected.
Army Sgt. 1st Class John Setera, who had deployed to Iraq
with Culbreth in 2009, draped a black hairdresser's cape around her and grabbed
the clippers. Chunks of Culbreth's hair fell down the front of the cape and
onto the floor at her feet.
"I wanted to take my hair on my own terms,"
Culbreth said, “instead of letting the chemo take it."
This was the second party the chaplain has held to shave her
head shortly after starting chemotherapy for breast cancer. The first was in
March 2010, when she was less than two months home from a deployment to Iraq
with the 30th Heavy Brigade Combat Team.
"I'm not sure which is going to be harder -- not
knowing what is going to happen over the next 18 weeks, or knowing what is
going to happen over the next 18 weeks," she said.
Third diagnosis
Culbreth, who now serves as the brigade chaplain for North
Carolina National Guard's 449th Theater Aviation Brigade, began her most recent
round of chemotherapy the week before her party. This is her third diagnosis
and her third round of chemotherapy.
"I know what chemo is like, because I've done it,"
Culbreth said. "To know I'm going to be doing that again, and going
through all the side effects. Again. Right now, that's probably the hardest
part."
At the head-shaving party Culbreth had in 2010, some 17
people shaved their heads to show their support. At this party, four people
shaved their heads, and many had a strip of their hair dyed pink. Culbreth said
she has lost track of the total number of people who were not able to make it
to the party who have done the same.
"It's been cool," she said. "It's been people
from a girl I went to middle school with and high school with, to soldiers I
deployed with to Iraq, to present-day folks that I served with in Charis
Foundation and worked with as therapists."
About 30 people gathered at the farm to celebrate Culbreth
and support her in her fight, including Army Sgt. Carrie MacCollum of the
1132nd Military Police Company, another of the soldiers who deployed with
Culbreth, in 2009.
The boss of the situation
"She's being the boss of the situation," MacCollum
said. "She's not letting cancer beat her; she's beating cancer. She took
it upon herself to shave her head, and she's taking her hair, not cancer. So
she's beating this, and we're all here to support her with that. We're beating
it with her."
Culbreth spent the evening surrounded by her family of
friends and soldiers she draws on for support.
"The military is my family," Culbreth said.
"That's who I have depended on since I got in, in 2006. They are my
brothers and sisters. I wouldn't know what to do. Some of the first people I
told were buddies that I deployed with. My unit, my brothers and sisters in the
Guard, my participation in the 30th Infantry Division Association, those are
the people I depend on. The whole ‘Guard is family’ thing seems like a pithy
saying, but I'm living proof that it's more than that -- that it’s true and
it’s honest, or there wouldn't be so many people here tonight."
Culbreth has spent eight years in the North Carolina
National Guard as a chaplain, being part of the support system for other
soldiers. Sometimes being a chaplain feels as if she is invisible, she said, but
at the party, she added, she realized how many people care.
"You're the fire extinguisher -- break in case of
emergency. When [life gets hard], everybody wants you there, but sometimes you
wonder if people notice in the meantime, and the answer to that is yes, because
tonight shows people care. And that's really important to me."
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