the bald & the beautiful Helen Bowles publishes a lifestyle magazine for women with cancer
P
rint media hardly makes the hot list of money-making entrepreneurial ideas in the 21st century.
But Helen Bowles thought of an idea for a magazine that no one else had. It was inspired by her friend Jean Maday, who was an executive director for the YMCA when Bowles met her. Jean was single and fabulous, a traveler who was known for her personal style and enviable shoes. Everywhere she went, she always had a glossy lifestyle magazine in her bag, Bowles says. After Jean was diagnosed with cancer, Bowles went to visit her in Chicago. âShe said, âThese magazines I carry around with me make me sad now,ââ Bowles recalls. âI canât do the makeup; I canât do the hair. My body has changed shape, so I donât want to buy any new clothes. It just augments the thought that my life is not going where I want it to.â Jean died a few years later, in January 2020, but Bowlesâ new magazine, Brighter, is produced four times a year in her memory. Bowles worked for the YMCA for over a decade before becoming a personal trainer specializing in postpartum women as clientele. She was looking for her next thing when the pandemic hit. She took her idea for a lifestyle
magazine for women with cancer to an acquaintance who is an oncologist in Fort Worth. âShe said, âIf you donât do it, someone else will,ââ Bowles says. The conversation showed her she was onto something unique that would fill a hole in the media landscape. The only problem: Bowles had no idea how to publish a magazine. She says sheâs called to serve and uplift women as part of her Christian faith, and she told her husband she felt like Moses, with a message to bring the world that just needed a medium. âI just need an Aaron,â she told him, referring to Mosesâ brother, who was his assistant and spokesman. Bowlesâ Aaron turned out to be Erin Schreyer, a photographer and leadership coach from Highland Park. âShe helped me hash out my mission and vision and goals for the magazine,â Bowles says. Brighter has a board of directors and has applied for nonprofit status, which Bowles expects to be finalized in April. The magazine is entirely selffunded and produced with all volunteers, including Bowles herself. The editorial staff includes four students from the Hockaday School, and its main editor is Hockaday senior Clair Cahoon.
âTheyâre rock solid and a huge part of the reason we can be successful,â Bowles says of her Hockaday interns. Other volunteer writers include cancer survivors, doctors and health professionals from all over the country. Their issues have contained headlines such as âThe girlfriendâs guide to cancerâ and touched on topics such as dermatology dos and donâts. A wig expert answers questions. Theyâve taken on the dirty details of pelvic radiation therapy as well as how to draw the perfect eyebrows. An idea driving their content: âI wish someone had told me that after I or a loved one was diagnosed.â âWeâre a support group for all types of cancer,â Bowles says. âWeâre always looking for diversity within our pages.â Bowles, a longtime Lake Highlands resident who now lives in Preston Hollow, wears all the hats of a small publisher, including advertising sales and delivering magazines out of the trunk of her car. Sheâs building a mailing list and distributes copies to local doctors' offices herself. Besides Jean, Bowles also lost her mom, Christie Steel, to pancreatic cancer in 2004. âThere are very few people who havenât been touched by cancer, so people come out of the woodwork to help,â she says. Brighter published two issues in 2021, and four are expected this year.
Story by RACHEL STONE | Photography by SHELBY TAUBER
22 lakehighlands.advocatemag.com MARCH 2022