Norman Freeman, 22, is a successful makeup artist
launching a nationwide tour. But he won't be hanging out in celebrity dressing
rooms he'll be in cancer wards, offering
free services to those who need a little confidence more than ever.
Freeman was diagnosed with alopecia, an autoimmune
disease causing chronic hair loss, at age 5. By 7, he had lost all of his hair,
including his eyebrows and eyelashes. “I was teased. People didn’t know if I
had cancer or what . They thought I had cancer, and they still teased me!” Freeman
told TODAY incredulously. Though his hair intermittently grew back throughout
his teenage years, it ultimately fell out again while he was in college.
Freeman was, in his words, “in a dark place.”
It was then that the aspiring makeup artist enrolled
in beauty school, turning the passion he’d discovered by watching YouTube tutorials
into a bona fide career and building
confidence through the glamorous looks he did on himself and others.
Freeman is a gifted artist, and his work quickly
gained traction on social media. But it took on a deeper meaning when he
decided to pay it forward by launching a self-funded project offering free
service to cancer patients.
“Being sick, not having any hair that is really devastating,” Freeman
explained. “But I can give you those eyelashes, those brows, and make you feel
better.”
“I know how untouchable makeup can make me feel,” he
continued. “I want help people say, ‘I’m sick, and it's awful, but I can still
feel beautiful.’
Right now, Freeman’s efforts are focused on the East
Coast, where the Pittsburgh native can easily travel. He has visited hospitals
in New York and Philadelphia, and hopes to continue as long (and as far and as
wide) as funding permits. Having struggled with a lack of control over his own
appearance and also lost family members to cancer, Freeman’s stake in the
project is personal and doing the
makeovers has already had a profound impact.
“There was a girl about 12 or 13
at a children’s hospital in Pittsburgh,” Freeman said. “She has no hair, and
she’s missing homecoming, school dances, holidays When I saw her mood, she was so positive. It
warmed my heart. For her to be dealing with this at such a young age I thought, if she can get up every day and be
happy, why can’t I?”
While Freeman has set up a GoFundMe page to offset
travel costs, money is the last thing on his mind. “I don’t want anything , one
girl drew me a picture, and I loved that,” he said. “I wish I could do 20 on Monday
and 20 again on Tuesday."It makes me a better person," he added.
"I want to use my talent to help others.”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Leave Comment Here