Benazir Ali is planning on a hair makeover with a difference.
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Beni, as she is nicknamed, has decided to cut her hair to support the World's Great Shave fundraiser.
Now 13, Beni was just five when she was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in July 2012.
Mum Shaleen said the family had had few clues that Beni was seriously ill.
"The only thing was that she was really lethargic, really, really tired," Mrs Ali said.
"The week she was diagnosed, she had a sore tummy and we had made an appointment with the doctor, but then she fainted so we took her straight to hospital."
Beni was diagnosed within hours of arrival at Wagga Base Hospital, where she underwent a blood transfusion before being transferred to Sydney.
She underwent two years of gruelling treatment, including chemotherapy, at Sydney Children's Hospital and was declared cancer-free in July 2017, five years after her initial diagnosis.
The teenager now wants to support other children who have leukaemia by joining in the World's Great Shave, which raises money to fight blood cancers.
Despite not being scheduled to chop her locks until March 7, Beni has already smashed the $500 fundraising goal she set herself.
By Monday afternoon, her fundraising tally stood at more than $1600.
"It's really good. I've had lots of support, even from overseas."
Despite being officially cancer-free, Beni is still facing some health issues, among them the autoimmune condition lupus.
Mrs Ali says it is not always easy, as her daughter just wants to be a teenager.