
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Send us a text
The emotional landscape after cancer treatment catches many survivors off guard. What most people don't anticipate is how something as seemingly benign as a comment about growing hair can trigger a cascade of complex feelings.
My experience walking down that cancer center hallway—gray, curly hair growing back after chemo, feeling like a stranger in my own body—revealed just how unprepared I was for the emotional aftermath of treatment. When that nurse called out "your hair looks great" and responded to my ambivalence with "just be glad you have hair," I was thrust into a whirlwind of shame, anger, and confusion. Why did I feel so sensitive? Why couldn't I just be grateful?
Through therapy and reflection, I discovered what many cancer survivors eventually learn: healing involves giving yourself permission to feel everything. The anger at what cancer took from you. The sadness over changes to your appearance. The frustration when others expect you to maintain a perpetually grateful attitude. These feelings exist alongside moments of joy, relief, and genuine gratitude—and all are valid parts of the recovery journey.
For anyone supporting someone through or after cancer, remember that asking "how are you feeling?" creates more meaningful connection than commenting on appearance. And for fellow survivors navigating this complicated terrain: your feelings are valid, your journey is your own, and you're doing remarkably well navigating a path few truly understand until they've walked it themselves. The real healing begins when we acknowledge the full spectrum of our emotions without judgment.
Support the show
? Have a question about our group trips? Book a call with Rebecca here: https://calendar.app.google/6wYbYugTCvJfXiWZ8
💪🏽 Get our Kilimanjaro Coaching: https://calendar.app.google/QW5JywkMYUpGcbsa8
✨ Do you want to sponsor Hike Like A Woman? Fill out our form: https://forms.gle/sXTcn2P9bVZ53Sqc6
/-/-/-/
TECH
▶️ Go-Pro: https://amzn.to/49yhSuq
▶️ DJI Wireless Microphone: https://amzn.to/49yhSuq
▶️ DJi Osmo Mobile Tripod: https://amzn.to/41q366E
/-/-/-/
SHOP
🥾 Rockporch (if you’re shopping REI or Moosejaw): https://app.rockporch.com/Profile/hikelikeawoman
🥾 Amazon (because ya know, we’re all doing it): https://www.amazon.com/shop/hikelikeawoman
🥾 Buy rad HLAW swag here: https://hikelikeawoman.creator-spring.com/
/-/-/-/
GROUP TRIPS
✈️ Join us for our next Kilimanjaro climb: https://trovatrip.com/trip/africa/tanzania/tanzania-with-hikelikeawoman-aug-2025
✈️ Join us for our group trip to Patagonia: https://trovatrip.com/trip/south-america/patagonia/argentina-with-rebecca-walsh-oct-2025
✈️ Book Tour du Mont Blanc Aug 16-22: ...
5
88 ratings
Send us a text
The emotional landscape after cancer treatment catches many survivors off guard. What most people don't anticipate is how something as seemingly benign as a comment about growing hair can trigger a cascade of complex feelings.
My experience walking down that cancer center hallway—gray, curly hair growing back after chemo, feeling like a stranger in my own body—revealed just how unprepared I was for the emotional aftermath of treatment. When that nurse called out "your hair looks great" and responded to my ambivalence with "just be glad you have hair," I was thrust into a whirlwind of shame, anger, and confusion. Why did I feel so sensitive? Why couldn't I just be grateful?
Through therapy and reflection, I discovered what many cancer survivors eventually learn: healing involves giving yourself permission to feel everything. The anger at what cancer took from you. The sadness over changes to your appearance. The frustration when others expect you to maintain a perpetually grateful attitude. These feelings exist alongside moments of joy, relief, and genuine gratitude—and all are valid parts of the recovery journey.
For anyone supporting someone through or after cancer, remember that asking "how are you feeling?" creates more meaningful connection than commenting on appearance. And for fellow survivors navigating this complicated terrain: your feelings are valid, your journey is your own, and you're doing remarkably well navigating a path few truly understand until they've walked it themselves. The real healing begins when we acknowledge the full spectrum of our emotions without judgment.
Support the show
? Have a question about our group trips? Book a call with Rebecca here: https://calendar.app.google/6wYbYugTCvJfXiWZ8
💪🏽 Get our Kilimanjaro Coaching: https://calendar.app.google/QW5JywkMYUpGcbsa8
✨ Do you want to sponsor Hike Like A Woman? Fill out our form: https://forms.gle/sXTcn2P9bVZ53Sqc6
/-/-/-/
TECH
▶️ Go-Pro: https://amzn.to/49yhSuq
▶️ DJI Wireless Microphone: https://amzn.to/49yhSuq
▶️ DJi Osmo Mobile Tripod: https://amzn.to/41q366E
/-/-/-/
SHOP
🥾 Rockporch (if you’re shopping REI or Moosejaw): https://app.rockporch.com/Profile/hikelikeawoman
🥾 Amazon (because ya know, we’re all doing it): https://www.amazon.com/shop/hikelikeawoman
🥾 Buy rad HLAW swag here: https://hikelikeawoman.creator-spring.com/
/-/-/-/
GROUP TRIPS
✈️ Join us for our next Kilimanjaro climb: https://trovatrip.com/trip/africa/tanzania/tanzania-with-hikelikeawoman-aug-2025
✈️ Join us for our group trip to Patagonia: https://trovatrip.com/trip/south-america/patagonia/argentina-with-rebecca-walsh-oct-2025
✈️ Book Tour du Mont Blanc Aug 16-22: ...
56 Listeners
2,576 Listeners
823 Listeners
506 Listeners
583 Listeners
1,173 Listeners
2,112 Listeners
877 Listeners
584 Listeners
1,261 Listeners
1,627 Listeners
884 Listeners
112 Listeners
696 Listeners
20,972 Listeners