Diaries of a Breast Cancer Baddie

Louisa Samasuwo

Laughing through chemo, crying through scans & cancer conversation where nothing is off limits. About the Podcast: Diaries of a Breast Cancer Baddie is a bold, light and honest breast cancer podcast sharing real breast cancer stories and cancer survivor interviews that don’t sugarcoat the journey. Hosted by young women with breast cancer, this show dives into the chemo journey, medically induced menopause, body changes, anger, identity shifts, friendships, relationships, sex and the messy in-between moments no one prepares you for. This isn’t just about surviving. It’s about navigating life after cancer — the good, the hard, and the darkly funny. We talk about what not to say to someone with cancer. We talk about losing hair, losing patience, and sometimes losing our minds. We talk about womanhood, community, and rebuilding confidence when your body feels unfamiliar. If you’re looking for raw breast cancer stories, honest cancer survivor interviews, and a real cancer community that understands what young women with breast cancer actually go through — you’re in the right place. This is for the baddies. The brave.The blunt. And anyone figuring out life after cancer one day at a time. About your host: November, 2025 It was just 17 months ago. l was fit, busy in my career, and exhausted chasing two young kids under the age of 5 — and then one day, I got that phone call. This podcast isn’t about being inspirational. It’s simply about telling it how it is, about telling you how it happens. It’s about the ridiculous, the emotional, the “what the hell is happening” moments. It’s about the roller coaster of this beast, and it’s about how it is absolutely not a linear process.  Because cancer isn’t just one thing. Its terrifying and can be isolating, but it’s also strangely funny sometimes. Like the time a Mum from school told me she didn’t realise I had cancer, she just thought I was really trendy by shaving off all my hair and rocking headscarves. Seriously? I have definitely shared that one with my fellow baddies and besties, and we have eye rolled and laughed about it.  So this is me — talking honestly about what it’s like to go through the journey of breast cancer, without the pink sparkle filter we all know and love. And if I can find ways to laugh about it, I reckon you can too. DISCLAIMER: The views shared on this podcast are based on personal experience and are not intended as medical advice. We are not healthcare professionals. Please consult your medical team with any health-related questions

Episodes

  1. MAR 17

    Episode 11 - Breast Cancer during Pregnancy - Part 2 - 'This was so not part of my Birthing Plan...'

    Send us Fan Mail In part 2 of this powerful pregnancy and breast cancer series, we hear the raw, chaotic and deeply moving reality of what happens when motherhood, cancer treatment and survival all collide at once. Jess and Eloise share what it was like to navigate rare and aggressive breast cancer diagnoses while pregnant, including inflammatory breast cancer, triple negative breast cancer, hormone positive disease, chemo during pregnancy, terrifying scans, NICU stays, premature birth and the impossible decisions no woman ever expects to face. From being told not to Google your pathology, to starting treatment while caring for a newborn, to giving birth at 26 weeks and watching a tiny baby be airlifted to NICU, this episode is a brutally honest look at fear, resilience, dark humour and the wild survival mode that kicks in when there is simply no other option. This conversation covers: -Breast cancer during pregnancy -Inflammatory breast cancer -Triple negative breast cancer -Chemo while pregnant -Premature birth and NICU -Postpartum cancer treatment -Pathology anxiety and doctor Google -Fertility, feeding grief and motherhood after diagnosis. It’s heartbreaking, funny, confronting and full of the kind of honesty only women who’ve lived it can bring. If you’ve ever felt terrified, overwhelmed, guilty, angry or completely out of your depth after a diagnosis, this episode will make you feel a little less alone. Support the show

    35 min
  2. MAR 8

    Episode 10 - Breast Cancer during Pregnancy - Part 1 - '2 Heart Beats, 1 Diagnosis, 0 Surrender'

    Send us Fan Mail Two Heartbeats. One Diagnosis. Zero Surrender. What happens when the moment that’s meant to be one of the happiest of your life suddenly collides with one of the most terrifying sentences you can hear: “You have breast cancer.” In this powerful episode of Diaries of a Breast Cancer Baddie, we sit down with two extraordinary women whose pregnancies took an unexpected and life-altering turn. Eloise was 13 weeks pregnant when she discovered a lump she initially believed was harmless — something she had been told years earlier was just a fibroadenoma. But further scans and biopsies revealed the unimaginable: stage 3 breast cancer while pregnant. Jess received her diagnosis at the other end of the pregnancy journey — 37 weeks pregnant and preparing to meet her baby. Two women. Two very different stages of pregnancy. The same terrifying diagnosis. In this raw and honest conversation, we talk about: • Finding a lump during pregnancy • The fear of being diagnosed with breast cancer while pregnant • Navigating scans, biopsies and treatment decisions while carrying a baby • The emotional toll of waiting for PET scan results • Balancing cancer treatment with motherhood • Why pregnancy and breast cancer is more common than many people realise Eloise shares the unforgettable moment her oncologist reassured her that the cancer had not spread, a moment that changed everything and gave her the strength to face the year ahead — chemotherapy, treatment and all. Both women speak openly about the mental battle that follows a diagnosis like this and the fierce determination that comes with being a mother. Because when you’re fighting cancer while pregnant, you’re not just fighting for yourself. You’re fighting for two heartbeats. This episode is emotional, empowering and deeply real — a reminder that cancer doesn’t always look the way people expect, and that strength can show up in the most extraordinary ways.  Listen if you want to hear: • Real stories of breast cancer during pregnancy • What happens when you’re diagnosed with breast cancer while pregnant • The realities of cancer treatment during pregnancy • Honest conversations about motherhood, fear and resilience Support the show

    35 min
  3. FEB 14

    Episode 9 - A Series with my Baddies - Part 4 - 'Vasectomies, Valium and Very Expensive Teeth'

    Send us Fan Mail In this episode of Diaries of a Breast Cancer Baddie — a breast cancer podcast sharing real, unfiltered breast cancer stories — we’re diving into the parts of the chemo journey and life after diagnosis that no one really prepares you for. From pre-surgery “champagne” (aka that blissful liquid Valium before you go under) to the emotional shift from “my body has betrayed me” to “my body is unbelievably resilient,” this episode captures the full arc of what it feels like to move through breast cancer treatment as a young woman. We talk about: • Medically induced menopause and what it actually means long-term • The unexpected realities of hormonal treatment after breast cancer • The financial side of cancer — health insurance, trauma insurance, out-of-pocket expenses • Managing the flood of messages and support after a cancer diagnosis • How to support someone with breast cancer (don’t ask — just do) • Why you absolutely shouldn’t Google your diagnosis • Accepting your body, scars, numbness and strength after treatment This episode is part cancer survivor interview, part friendship therapy session, part practical guide for anyone navigating a breast cancer diagnosis in Australia. If you’re a young woman with breast cancer, supporting a loved one through cancer treatment, or adjusting to life after cancer — this one will make you feel seen. We also share honest conversations around medically induced menopause, fertility concerns, body image, finances and community support — because surviving cancer isn’t just about treatment. It’s about everything that comes after. As always, this podcast shares personal experiences only and is not medical advice. Please speak to your healthcare team for guidance specific to you. Take the juju. Don’t spiral. One step at a time. Support the show

    20 min
  4. FEB 8

    Episode 8 - A Series with my Baddies - Part 3 - 'Late Nights, Loud Thoughts'

    Send us Fan Mail This episode goes where the thoughts get loud — the middle of the night, when no one’s around and your brain refuses to switch off. We talk about the things that made us angry (misinformation, mixed messages, and being told what we can’t do), the frustration of navigating cancer in a world drowning in advice, and the quiet grief of wondering “what if?” — especially around missed diagnoses and being told you’re “too young.” We unpack the things people say with the best intentions… and why some of them still sting. From “you look great” to “you’re all good now,” we explore how comments land differently depending on the day — and why there’s no perfect thing to say to someone going through treatment. We also talk about identity: not recognising yourself in the mirror, scars, hair loss, returning to work too fast, and the pressure to be “back to normal” when you’ve just lived through trauma. There’s honesty, dark humour, swearing, tears, and plenty of laughs — because that’s how we survived it. Most of all, this episode is about womanhood and community. About being held by people who get it. About late-night fears of legacy, kids, caregiving, and mortality — and how, once the diagnosis comes, you realise you’ve got a job to do… and you just do it. Raw. Funny. Heavy. Relieving. If you’ve ever lain awake at night with loud thoughts — this one’s for you. DISCLAIMER:  The views shared in this podcast are based on personal experiences only. We are not medical professionals, and nothing discussed should be taken as medical advice. Always consult your doctor, specialist, or healthcare team for any medical questions, decisions, or concerns. Support the show

    28 min
  5. FEB 2

    Episode 7 - A Series with my Baddies - Part 2 - ' Cold Caps and No Chill'

    Send us Fan Mail In Part 2 of 'A Series with My Baddies', we hand the mic to Anne and dive into what her treatment plan was supposed to look like… and what it actually became. Anne talks us through her lumpectomy and lymph node surgery, the curveball of not having a complete pathological response, and how that changed her treatment timeline — extending things further than expected (because cancer loves a plot twist). We also get into cold capping: what it is, what it’s like, and whether we’d do it again — plus the very real reality of hair loss, hats, patchy spots, and that banging haircut you get when your hair starts to normalise, and you feel like a rockstar! From there, we go deeper into the big decisions women face: lumpectomy vs mastectomy, the emotional and psychological weight behind those choices, and how genetics and family history can influence decision-making. We also chat about genetic testing — why some of us did it, what it clarified (or didn’t), and how complex it can feel when you’re already drowning in information. And because this is us… we also talk about what pissed us off during treatment — the little things, the big things, and the stuff people say that should honestly come with a fine. Raw, honest, funny in the way you have to be to survive it — and proof that sometimes the only way through is together. DISCLAIMER: We do not give medical advice, as we are not qualified medical pracitioners. Please refer to your Oncology specialists. Support the show

    26 min
  6. 12/12/2025

    Episode 3 - A Series with Irene - Part 2. 'Chemo Cocktails at the Cottage!'

    Send us Fan Mail In this episode of Diaries of a Breast Cancer Baddie, Lu sits down with Irene to talk about the one thing everyone dreads but no one really explains properly: chemo. They take you inside the Patricia Ritchie Centre – lovingly renamed the Chemo Cottage – where treatment looked less like a cold hospital ward and more like an old heritage home full of nurses, support people and patients talking absolute nonsense for hours in recliner chairs. Lu shares how she counted her life in rounds (16 over 20 weeks), how weirdly not awful the actual drip time could be, and why she now regrets not scheduling her chemo dates to line up with her baddie besties. The girls dive into the real side effects: the three-week chemo cycle of feeling fine, then feeling like complete dog shit, then slowly resurfacing; diarrhoea and constipation at the same time (fun!), ulcers on eyelids, chemo rash, neuropathy, chemo brain that feels like baby brain on steroids, red pee from the Red Devil, taste buds going AWOL, and gaining weight even when you’re barely eating. Plus the joy of “dex” steroids, sharing pills like tic tacs, and the chaos of trying to pee while dragging the IV pole and ten bags of fluids into a tiny bathroom. They also unpack radiation – why the fatigue hit differently, how advanced the tech is at the Mater (curving lasers that avoid the heart and lungs), and what it’s like to lie under a giant machine called Apollo while your boob slowly turns into a rock-hard, permanently perky science project over 12 months. It’s honest, a bit feral, unexpectedly funny, and full of gratitude for the treatment and care available in Australia – with zero sugar-coating about the toll it takes. This episode isn’t medical advice – just two baddies sharing what chemo and radiation actually felt like for them.Support the show

    19 min
  7. 11/24/2025

    Episode 1 - "From Breast Cancer Muggle, to Breast Cancer Baddie!'

    Send us Fan Mail In the very first episode of Diaries of a Breast Cancer Baddie, Louisa (AKA Lu) takes you right back to the moment that changed everything: the phone call no one is ever ready for. At 34, with two young kids, a busy career and a full life, Lu thought she was doing all the “right” things. Then, out of nowhere, came those three words: You have breast cancer. This episode is her unfiltered, unglossed, no-pink-sparkle retelling of what happened next — from the shock, the disbelief, and the wild medical guessing games, to the dark humour and chaos that somehow kept her afloat. Lu shares:  ✨ The misdiagnosed lump that “wasn’t anything” — until it absolutely was  ✨ The surreal weeks of tests, biopsies, and life-or-death decisions  ✨ The emotional whiplash of planning chemo one minute and a tropical family holiday the next  ✨ The story of “chemo bird,” unsolicited advice from strangers, and why gallows humour saved her sanity  ✨ How a young mum, mid-career woman, and self-proclaimed sarcastic queen learned to navigate the fear, fight and absurdity of early breast cancer This isn’t an inspirational highlight reel — it’s real, raw and ridiculously human. If you’ve ever googled symptoms while holding it together for your kids, if you’ve ever been hit sideways by life, or if you’re craving honesty without the doom and gloom… this episode is for you. Welcome to the diaries. Welcome to the chaos. Welcome to the baddie side of breast cancer 💗🔥 Support the show

    17 min

About

Laughing through chemo, crying through scans & cancer conversation where nothing is off limits. About the Podcast: Diaries of a Breast Cancer Baddie is a bold, light and honest breast cancer podcast sharing real breast cancer stories and cancer survivor interviews that don’t sugarcoat the journey. Hosted by young women with breast cancer, this show dives into the chemo journey, medically induced menopause, body changes, anger, identity shifts, friendships, relationships, sex and the messy in-between moments no one prepares you for. This isn’t just about surviving. It’s about navigating life after cancer — the good, the hard, and the darkly funny. We talk about what not to say to someone with cancer. We talk about losing hair, losing patience, and sometimes losing our minds. We talk about womanhood, community, and rebuilding confidence when your body feels unfamiliar. If you’re looking for raw breast cancer stories, honest cancer survivor interviews, and a real cancer community that understands what young women with breast cancer actually go through — you’re in the right place. This is for the baddies. The brave.The blunt. And anyone figuring out life after cancer one day at a time. About your host: November, 2025 It was just 17 months ago. l was fit, busy in my career, and exhausted chasing two young kids under the age of 5 — and then one day, I got that phone call. This podcast isn’t about being inspirational. It’s simply about telling it how it is, about telling you how it happens. It’s about the ridiculous, the emotional, the “what the hell is happening” moments. It’s about the roller coaster of this beast, and it’s about how it is absolutely not a linear process.  Because cancer isn’t just one thing. Its terrifying and can be isolating, but it’s also strangely funny sometimes. Like the time a Mum from school told me she didn’t realise I had cancer, she just thought I was really trendy by shaving off all my hair and rocking headscarves. Seriously? I have definitely shared that one with my fellow baddies and besties, and we have eye rolled and laughed about it.  So this is me — talking honestly about what it’s like to go through the journey of breast cancer, without the pink sparkle filter we all know and love. And if I can find ways to laugh about it, I reckon you can too. DISCLAIMER: The views shared on this podcast are based on personal experience and are not intended as medical advice. We are not healthcare professionals. Please consult your medical team with any health-related questions