In 2021, as if a global pandemic wasn’t enough, I became one of the 1000 young Australian women under 39 diagnosed with aggressive triple-negative breast cancer. I was 30.
I tended to believe I was invincible. That was until one fateful April day when I did my first real examination of my breasts and found a lump. There is an emotional uniqueness to realising your body has failed you by getting cancer. A sense of hopelessness.
I was a 30-year-old woman who, in my wildest dreams, would never think I’d have the big C, yet here I was facing my mortality. I was forced to navigate a strange new world of self and social isolation from COVID and intensive treatment: 40 weeks of chemotherapy, three weeks of radiation, and life-changing surgery. However, the real battle for me was fought psychologically. I faced crippling sadness and loneliness. If you see photos from my time battling cancer, you can see a smile, but it never reaches my eyes.
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Cancer weaseled its way into every aspect of my life, sowing doubt and taking up all the oxygen. I feared never being able to have children (still do, by the way). I was stuck in the mud, and I would scroll through social media, feeling deeply resentful and jealous of people and the wonderful lives they led. Marriage, kids, milestones – these were all things I couldn’t experience because I was fighting for my life. I felt like a mere spectator. The relentless isolation and self-preservation caused me to disconnect emotionally, which resulted in strained relationships.