My story

On 4 September 2023, I was diagnosed with rectal cancer at the age of 45. It was a shock to say the least, as I had no truly definitive symptoms other than some constipation while I was traveling in France, which I put down to eating amazing cheese and drinking rose. When I returned from France, my horse became very ill with salmonella, and I had gastro-like symptoms that I thought must have also been salmonella. A visit to the GP, followed by blood and stool tests, returned no unusual results, but I had a further attack of ‘gastro’, so my GP referred me to have a colonoscopy.

When I woke from the colonoscopy something seemed abnormal, as I wasn’t offered anything to eat or drink, and was told by the nurse that the gastroenterologist would be in to see me. I received the news from the gastroenterologist that he had located a tumour, but I took it in my stride, thinking ‘Surgery will fix that, and I’ll move on’. I was sent to have a CT that evening and referred to a surgeon later that week. Prior to seeing the surgeon, I also had an MRI.


Unfortunately, the news from the surgeon was not good. The CT scan and MRI revealed that rectal cancer had metastasised to my uterus, pelvic lymph nodes, and my lungs. Surgery was not the preferred option straight away, and I was referred to an oncologist and had a PET scan. Ten days after what I thought would be a routine colonoscopy, I started Chemotherapy and was eternally grateful to live in a time and country where such treatment could commence so quickly.


I am generally a very happy and positive person and have taken that attitude into my treatment; I am confident there is nothing but a positive outcome for me. I can’t imagine approaching the diagnosis and treatment any other way, but it was vital for my kids (aged 13 and 11at the time of my diagnosis) to see me as positive. I also really believe that a positive mindset can really affect wellness and well-being.

I started 12 rounds of Chemotherapy on 15 September 2023. Treatments were 2 weeks apart and each infusion lasted 3 days, which felt like a vigorous assault at times.  My wonderful group of friends formed “Soozie’s Floozies” and did a whole lot of fun uplifting activities for me including a flashmob on my street which stopped traffic! My friends and family and my clients kept asking what they could do to help. So I asked my friends and family to send me “glimmers” of Pink and orange that they saw through the day and I posted them to my Instagram it surrounded me with more love and positivity and reminded me I wasn’t alone.

I also asked my friends and family to share my story to raise some awareness of early onset bowel cancer and to ensure that if they were over 45 to use their screening tests. My friends took this further and created hats and bangles with #sooziesfloozies on them they are bright pink and so many people ask what the hats and bangles are about which results in my story being told. I also want to ensure all cancer patients no matter what stage or type build resilience and find joy in life that I was lucky to have.

My first follow-up PET scan after 3 rounds showed all tumours shrinking and activity decreasing, and I had the same results after 7 treatments and 12 treatments. Excitingly, I finished chemo on 16 February 2024 and started getting strong for surgery.  My oncologist and I were so sure that I had it beat provided the surgery was successful I would have radiation on the two tumours in my lungs and I would be cancer-free!

Surgery was the 25th of March 2024, and I cried tears of joy when my surgeon said he got clear margins.  I was also so relieved that I avoided having a stoma as well!

In May 2024, I had my PET scan to plan the radiation of the two tumours in my lungs.  Disappointingly, the tumours in my lungs had grown and there were now 10 visible tumours instead of the 2!  It shocked me and I got depressed.  But instead of going down a very dark hole I picked myself up I started chemo again (a different one an oral one that was on a 3-week cycle) and I got to work on planning a fabulous fundraising party.  Soozie’s Floozies raised $14,000 for bowel cancer care nurses in the hope that it would improve the quality of life for bowel cancer patients.  I also worked hard on my mindfulness and gratitude practice which improved my resilience.  I realised then that access to learning mindfulness and gratitude with cancer is very challenging and I really wanted to make it something easily accessible to cancer patients and so The Floozie Foundation was born.

In the time it took to get my liver right, the tumours grew and multiplied again… So in November 2024, I restarted fortnightly chemo infusions lasting 3 days at a time. My PET scan in March 2025 showed one of the tumours had resolved and the others had stayed the same.

Gentle exercise, mindfulness and gratitude really do make a difference to the treatment of cancer and The Floozie Foundation aims to make these practices readily available at low cost or no cost to improve the quality of life for adult cancer patients around Australia.