Last fall, Lora DeVore dreamed that her body was being painted with Hebrew letters by beings in long, white robes.
The Golden Valley-based mental health professional was amid back-to-back health crises. After recovering from a severe case of COVID-19 last spring, DeVore found out she had breast cancer.
DeVore learned the meaning of the Hebrew symbols — unity, compassion and healing among them — and decided to have 22 letters painted all over her body using henna, the plant-based dye. Five of them, arranged in a blossom, were applied to her scalp, because she'd lost her hair during the month she spent hospitalized with coronavirus.
Adorning herself with the henna letters helped DeVore prepare for her upcoming mastectomy.
"I felt there was a sense of protection and blessing when I went into that surgery," she said. "There was something that was very soothing about having them on my body, and particularly on my head."

Henna has traditionally been used to stain skin, nails and hair in parts of North Africa, the Middle East and South Asia. While the decorative body art is most commonly applied to the hands and feet, some people who are bald — due to chemotherapy, alopecia or shaving their heads, among other reasons — choose to have henna applied to their scalp.
These so-called henna crowns change the way their wearers feel about themselves. And how others perceive them.
After DeVore lost her hair, she wore hats in public because she felt self-conscious, and avoided seeing her photos or reflections. But the henna crown changed her perspective.