do it." Davidson's dad, Ben Craine, who once owned a photography studio, has been taking photos at the walk for the past two years. Recently, he was named "Official Photographer for the Komen Walk for Michigan," Vicki says, responsible for taking pictures of every- one on the walk. Meantime, Ellyn's husband, Jon Davidson, who is in the steel business, "takes care of the kids and cheers." "It's the most organized event I've ever attended in my life," Ellyn says. "You stay in pink tents, and they have good showers. "You walk and you talk for three days," she says. "You feel so accom- plished by doing this." "It's exhilarating," her mom seconds. "We all cry at opening ceremonies. As we walk, we laugh; we eat; nobody complains. At closing ceremonies, sur- vivors walk in wearing their pink T-shirts. We cry again. Then we say 'thank good- ness it's over for another year." _ _ n11156.31i _ ,ret? 11.1.■ ww. • Above: "At the end of each day, our 'tent city' is our home," says Cheryl Darmon, who has trained, raised funds and walked for each of the past seven ye Right: Ellyn Davidson and her mother, Vicki Crabte, also attend events to help raise awareness of hereditary breast and ovarian cancer in the Jewish community. Far right: Lisa Siegmann will walk for CHERYL DARMON No, Cheryl Darmon doesn't have the itch to do something different. She will walk 60 miles for the seventh year in the Michigan 3-Day for the Cure. "I thankfully have never had breast cancer," the Farmington Hills wife and mother of three says. The first year I decided to walk was as simple as `because I can.' I didn't think I could ever bike 300 miles, run a marathon or swim across a lake — but walking I could do. "I probably walk for all men and women but specifically so my girls won't have to. My goal is to walk until we don't have a need anymore." In the early years, Ellyn Davidson (see above) was one of her sponsors — each walker has to raise at least $2,300 to participate. When Davidson devel- oped breast cancer, Darmon walked with Davidson's photograph attached to her backpack. Now she and her cousin, Gail Elkus of Huntington Woods who is walking for the sixth time, are part of Davidson's TaTa team. The walk, Darmon says, "is an amaz- ing coming together of people of all ages, sexes, colors, religions ... and the survivors. We all know that we are there for the same reason but we all have dif- ferent reasons for being there." Darmon, 45, says from the moment the walk begins participants are urged on "by an endless, energetic crew [440- strong, all volunteers], Harley-Davidson motorcycle men and women decked out in pink and streets upon streets of cheering folks." the first time in the 3-Day. Over the three days, she says, "We walk, talk and share with thousands of people. At the end of each day our 'tent city' is our home away from home. You eat dinner and breakfast with people you just met; you shower and brush your teeth with strangers — and every- one always smiles." That includes people hobbling around on blistered feet or suffer- ing shin splints, says Darmon, a pre- school teacher at Adat Shalom Early Childhood Center in Farmington Hills. Husband Paul Darmon, a Beverly Hills dentist, shows up for the closing cer- emonies with son Zach, 17, and daugh- ters, Mollie, 15, and Sammi, 12, — all in their "pretty pink T-shirts." He is very supportive, she says, and had a gigan- tic banner made for me that he holds as we walk into closing ceremonies. "It [the 3-Day] is the best and most difficult thing I do each year," Cheryl says. "You are constantly motivated on by cheers and friends, and sometimes the little 4-year-old holding the poster that says 'Thanks for walking, you saved my mommy!'" How To Donate To contribute to a participant on Suz Cruise or TaTa teams, or make a general donation, visit vv-ww.the3Day,org. Fast Facts About The Walk • The Susan G. Komen 3-Day for the Cure is a 60-mile, three-day walk for women and men who want to make a personal difference in the fight to . end breast cancer. * Participants commit to raise at least $2,300 each and generally spend several months training to prepare for the event. * Meals, snacks, drinks, shower facilities, tents, safety guidelines and 24-hour medical support are provided for walkers. • Since the 3-Day's inception in 2003, 15 different cities have held walks and raised a total of almost $500 million to help pay for global breast cancer research and local programs supporting education, screening and treatment. * Breast cancer is the most frequently diagnosed cancer and the leading 41 cause of death among women worldwide. Tc More than 1.3 million women are diagnosed with breast cancer glob- ally each year. More than 465.000 die from the disease each year. * In the United States, about 200,000 women and 1,500 men develo breast cancer each year; about 23,000 women develop ovarian cancer. * Jewish women of Eastern European descent are at increased risk for the mutation that causes breast and/or ovarian cancer. That mutation, which can be detected through genetic testing. causes breast and/or ovarian cancer in 1 in 40 Ashkenazi Jews as compared to 1 in 800 in the general population. Source: Susan G. Komen for the Cure and the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. JN July 29 • 2010 41