Tag: lobular breast cancer


  • The Road is the research

    Earlier in the year, I made a monumental decision. I bought a Ford Transit van, named her Birdie, and painted her green in preparation to be converted into my tiny home on wheels. Working on her over the past few weeks in all weathers, with my trusty 12-year-old cockapoo Ziggy by my side, I’ve come…

  • Together we are stronger: join the rebellion

    For me, activism isn’t solely health related. Yesterday, I attended the Together Alliance ‘March To Stop the Far Right’ in London. It was a glorious day filled with unity and love that gave people from across the country the opportunity to express their opposition to the frightening authoritarian ideology that’s polluting the political system, both…

  • Calling all UK-based lobular breast cancer patients

    I’m writing The Healthcare Rebellion (2028), a non-fiction narrative memoir investigating how institutional power structures have embedded inequity into UK women’s healthcare for centuries, causing disparity that persists today. The book traces the direct lineage from ancient hierarchies to modern medical failures, interweaving my own lobular breast cancer story with the history of activist resistance…

  • Chapter one completed

    I’ve finished writing the first chapter of my debut book, The Healthcare Rebellion (2028). I’m relieved to have crossed this initial writing threshold as a new author and I’m starting to naturally find my rhythm in the process. Chapter one documents my invasive lobular breast cancer diagnosis in January 2023, the first half of active…

  • Ovary and out…

    Ovary and out…

    Last Wednesday 10th December, I said a very fond farewell to my ovaries; the female organs which produced the egg that created my son and kept my hormones in check (most of the time) for over 50 years. When you stop to think about it, the human body is spectacular. If we take care of…

  • When your cancer has no roadmap

    I’m Kate Ford Michaels, a writer and activist. In January 2023, aged 49, I was diagnosed with invasive lobular breast cancer, a disease, which until then, I’d never heard of. In fact, I had no idea there were different types of breast cancer. Despite being recognised as a distinct subtype of the disease in the…