Story Published:
Aug 1, 2005 at 7:21 AM PDT
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 2:01 AM PDT
EVERETT - Miss Everett Teen USA 2004 is putting away
her sash to put on a U.S. Army uniform.
Last summer, Jennifer Cabanayan appeared at community events,
including the Mukilteo Lighthouse Festival and the National Night
Out Against Crime, as Miss Everett Teen USA 2004. Now she has
enlisted in the Army and will leave for boot camp at Fort Jackson,
S.C., on Aug. 11.
The petite brunette says Army service has always been in the
back of her mind.
"I'm capable, I'm healthy. This is the right thing to do,"
said Cabanayan, who attended Cascade and Marysville-Pilchuck high
schools before earning her GED. "I cannot wait for that moment of
putting on a uniform. It gives you that honor."
Paulene Saylor, Cabanayan's mother, said her daughter comes from
a military family. Saylor's father, Otis Saylor of Stanwood, served
two tours in Vietnam with an Army airborne unit. His granddaughter
will follow in his boot steps. After basic training, she'll go to
airborne jump school at Fort Benning, Ga.
"I've shed a lot of tears, but I'm really proud of her. I
encouraged my boys to join the military. I didn't think she was
listening," said Saylor, a mother of four whose oldest son was in
the Navy.
The Sept. 11, 2001, attacks brought personal loss. A family
friend died, one reason Cabanayan was compelled to join the war on
terror. London's deadly bombings July 7 made her certain.
Nearly four years ago, Cabanayan was getting ready for school
when she heard her mother scream. "I thought it was a movie," she
said of TV images of planes flying into the World Trade Center
towers. "All my friends have grown up so fast. Current events,
that's not just a class."
Their friend Amy Jarrett was a 28-year-old flight attendant on
United Airlines Flight 175, the plane that crashed into the second
tower. "Every one of those people who died had families and
friends," Cabanayan said. "I never thought it would hit home."
The Miss Everett Teen USA title was a way to have a voice. "If
smaller kids think you're a princess, they might listen more,"
Cabanayan said. Last November, she competed in the state pageant.
Her Everett reign ended in May.
What's ahead for Cabanayan is far from the glitzy world before
the TV cameras.
Otis Saylor, who's been teaching his granddaughter how to lace
paratrooper boots, said she "doesn't have the slightest idea" of
the trials to come. "Boot camp is not an easy thing," the
62-year-old Saylor said. "She thinks it's going to be a picnic.
"I'm proud of her joining the military," he added. Yet, Otis
Saylor said he "completely disagrees with the war in Iraq."
"I'm a very patriotic person, but I think the war in Iraq is
wrong," he said.
As a woman, Cabanayan can't go into combat roles, but support
roles could put her in areas of combat. Recruiter Jason Bayard
acknowledged recruitment numbers are down as the Iraq insurgency
and violence in Afghanistan continue. "These are tough times," he
said.
Cabanayan hopes to go to college on benefits earned during three
years of active duty. Advertising or fashion merchandising strike
her fancy.