Doctors Treated My Breast Cancer, but Healing Came From Me

They called my name like it was just another on the list.
It wasn’t just my body that walked into that room; I was carrying the weight of everything it had survived.
I sat on the edge of the exam table, trying to focus, trying to be present — but somewhere inside me, I had already started to brace for something awful. Because appointments like this don’t begin with a “hello.” They begin with, “Let’s go over your scans.”
The waiting room is where you rehearse being calm.
The exam room is where you expect clarity, where you hope for healing.
This time, I got neither.
Finding My Way Through the Fog
My healing began when I hung up the phone after my oncologist yelled at me — for simply asking for better communication. I had waited two weeks with an MRI report in my chart that said “significant artifact blocking the frontal lobe and brainstem.” I never received a call to discuss the results. No messages. No clarification. Just silence.
When I called to ask for answers, I was told I was being disrespectful. Not because I yelled, but because I self-advocated. Somehow, my voice — measured, honest, direct — was too much.
The doctor raised his voice. I lowered mine.
He cut me off. I stayed in it.
And when I hung up, I realized that the problem didn’t lie in just that one conversation. It was about how many times we as breast cancer veterans are told to be quiet, to trust the system, to “be grateful.”
We are grateful.
But we are also tired.
Because scanxiety is real. Because our bodies are not charts, they are stories — and those stories deserve more than silence.
A few days later, I sat across from my new oncologist. She pulled up the scans and explained them, slide by slide, sequence by sequence. She gave me what I had longed for: clarity.
She looked me in the eyes and said, “Your brain is clear.”
And that’s when it hit me — and the tears came.
It was not a quiet, composed cry; it was a deep, guttural sob. A full-body, grief-soaked exhalation of breath that I hadn’t realized I’d been holding in for weeks.
Because when that first doctor yelled at me, he didn’t just violate professional boundaries — he stole my breath. He made it impossible for me to believe I was safe.
What Does It Mean to Heal?
Through this experience, I learned something about healing that I want every breast cancer veteran to know: Healing is not linear.
It doesn’t look like what others told you it would.
It doesn’t mean you “get over it.”
Healing means you live with it — and you learn to hold your joy and grief in the same breath. Because you cannot taste real joy if you haven’t let yourself feel real sorrow. Grief cracks us open — and in that broken space, light can get in.
So if you’re still in the middle of it — if your body is tired, your spirit is tender, and your chart says “NED” (no evidence of disease) but your soul still feels shattered — you are not doing it wrong. You are healing.
And it may not happen in the waiting room or the exam room. But it can happen — in your kitchen, your shower, on a walk, in a mirror, or the moment you finally choose to believe that you are allowed to become something new.
Healing doesn’t always look clean. It doesn’t always look quiet.
Sometimes it’s rage. Sometimes it’s a second opinion. Sometimes it’s leaving a doctor who no longer deserves your story.
But every act of reclaiming your voice is an act of healing.
To every breast cancer veteran reading this:
You are not a burden for needing clarity.
You are not ungrateful for asking for better.
You are not too much.
You are sacred.
Your body is still yours.
And your voice — it deserves to echo through every room you walk into.
Even if it shakes.
Important: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and not Everyday Health.

Walter Tsang, MD
Medical Reviewer
Outside of his busy clinical practice, Tsang has taught various courses at UCLA Center for East West Medicine, Loma Linda University, and California University of Science and Medicine. He is passionate about health education and started an online seminar program to teach cancer survivors about nutrition, exercise, stress management, sleep health, and complementary healing methods. Over the years, he has given many presentations on integrative oncology and lifestyle medicine at community events. In addition, he was the founding co-chair of a lifestyle medicine cancer interest group, which promoted integrative medicine education and collaborations among oncology professionals.
Tsang is an active member of American Society of Clinical Oncology, Society for Integrative Oncology, and American College of Lifestyle Medicine. He currently practices at several locations in Southern California. His goal is to transform cancer care in the community, making it more integrative, person-centered, cost-effective and sustainable for the future.

Asha Miller
Author
Despite enduring 12 surgeries, she remains resolute in her pursuit of mental, physical, and spiritual healing.
Asha's experience includes a double mastectomy, reconstructive surgeries, and overcoming the challenges of implant recalls. Through her unwavering dedication to her family, social justice activism, and commitment to health and fitness, Asha has become a renowned advocate for self-advocacy, particularly for BIPOC women navigating the healthcare system.