 Captain Cara Manning is just about to deploy, but she's not taking her long hair with her. Just keeping your hair clean and making sure that it's dry, it's a lot easier on a deployment when my hair's shorter. I didn't want to deal with, you know, sweating and it's constantly lying on your neck. She's not just cutting her hair for the deployment, she's measuring it. It's more than 12 inches, that should be good. And getting it ready to donate to someone else, Captain Manning's donating 16 inches of her hair to Locks of Love, a non-profit organization that makes wigs for children who've lost their hair due to any medical diagnosis. Other programs, like Beautiful Lengths, provide free wigs to adult women who've lost their hair because of cancer treatment. Ready? There's certain expectations from society as to what is feminine and the hair plays a big portion in that. Oh, there's a lot of weight off my head all of a sudden. For someone to lose that, that must be very upsetting to them. It's fine, it's fine, it's going to be fine. I thought it was important to get the word out there. You know, some are coming out, people are chopping off inches, so why not if it's only going to end up on the floor, why not donate to somebody that could use it? In Vilsack, Germany, I'm Army Sergeant Rebecca Schwab.