I see you — because
I have been you.
Our founder is a cancer survivor. This support comes from the inside out, not from a clinical framework applied from the outside. Whether you are in treatment, past it, or carrying someone through it — this is a space that truly understands.

Cancer does not just
affect your body.
A cancer diagnosis changes everything — your sense of your body, your relationship with the future, your identity, your relationships, and your understanding of what is certain and what is not. The fear is not irrational. The grief is real. The way it reshapes your sense of self is clinically significant and deserves real support.
Most people around you want to be helpful and end up being minimizing — focusing on survival rates, positive thinking, or what you should be grateful for. You may find yourself managing their feelings about your diagnosis alongside your own. That is exhausting, and it is not something you should have to do alone.
"I have heard the diagnosis, sat in the waiting rooms, gone through treatment, and come out the other side. When you sit across from me, none of this needs explaining."
Survivorship does not end when treatment does. The anxiety about recurrence, the grief over the person you were before, the complicated relationship with your body, the difficulty trusting health that felt certain and then was not — these are real and ongoing and deserve real support.
For caregivers and families, the emotional toll is also significant. Watching someone you love go through a serious illness, the helplessness, the anticipatory grief, the way your own needs get sidelined — caregiver burnout is real and treatable.
At every stage — before, during, after, and for the people alongside you — this support is available.
At every stage
of the journey.
During Treatment
- Fear, uncertainty, and the anticipatory grief of not knowing what comes next
- The exhaustion of keeping it together for everyone around you
- Identity disruption as your body changes and your life narrows
- Relationship strain as the diagnosis affects everyone differently
After Treatment
- Recurrence anxiety — the fear that never fully quiets
- Grief for the person you were and the life you had before
- Rebuilding trust in your body and your future
- Finding meaning and purpose in what comes next
For Caregivers & Families
- Caregiver burnout and the depletion of sustained giving
- Anticipatory grief — the loss before the loss
- Your own fear and helplessness alongside their experience
- Navigating your needs when everything is focused elsewhere
For First Responders with Cancer
- Occupational cancer in the fire service and other high-exposure professions
- The specific grief of a job-related diagnosis
- Navigating treatment while managing the identity of your career
- Support that understands both the clinical and cultural context
"Surviving is not the same as living. Therapy is where the distance between them closes."
You don't have to navigate
this alone.
Whatever stage you are in — whatever role you are playing — there is support here that comes from real understanding. Reach out whenever you are ready.
