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Learning to Trust Your Body Again After Breast Cancer
One of the most unexpected challenges after breast cancer is learning to trust your body again. Before diagnosis, most of us move through life without paying much attention to every sensation we experience. A headache is just a headache. A sore shoulder is simply a sore shoulder. A tired day is usually put down to being busy. After breast cancer, that relationship with our body often changes. Suddenly every ache, pain or unfamiliar feeling can feel significant. Many women des

Trudie France
Jun 33 min read


Living With the Fear of Recurrence: Practical Ways to Take Back Control
One of the most common concerns I hear from women after breast cancer is: "What if it comes back?" Fear of recurrence is something many people experience, whether they are weeks, months or even years beyond treatment. The challenge is that fear often feels convincing. It tells us that if we worry enough, prepare enough, monitor ourselves enough, somehow we can prevent bad things from happening. Unfortunately, constant worry rarely brings reassurance. More often, it leaves us

Trudie France
May 203 min read


Breast Cancer and Fear: Why Fear Doesn't End When Treatment Does...
When people think about breast cancer treatment, they often focus on the physical challenges. The surgery. The chemotherapy. The radiotherapy. The endless appointments. But one of the most significant challenges many women face is something less visible: fear. Fear often arrives from the very moment something feels wrong. It can grow during diagnosis, intensify throughout treatment, and for many people, remain long after treatment has ended. Even when your hair has grown back

Trudie France
Apr 153 min read


Life After Breast Cancer Treatment: What No One Tells You
You’ve rung the bell. You’ve celebrated with family and friends. Your hair is starting to grow back. The NHS has waved you off with a “you’re all done now,” and on the surface it looks like life should be returning to normal. But behind the smiles and relief, you’re exhausted in a way you can’t explain. Climbing the stairs leaves you breathless. Your joints ache so much you hobble to the bathroom in the morning. Sleep is patchy, your memory unreliable, and your concentration

Trudie France
Feb 262 min read
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