Samantha Owen | The Hospice of St. Francis

Samantha Owen

“The Art Bag project has massively helped me find myself again".

Forty-nine-year-old mum of two, Samantha Owen, from St Albans, had always been a bubbly and outgoing ‘people person’.

Her diary was full of social engagements and she thrived on helping others. But when she was diagnosed with breast cancer in April 2016 her confidence took a tumble and all she wanted to do was hide away from the world.

It wasn’t until she became involved with The Hospice of St Francis’ Art Bag project, in partnership with Peace Hospice Care and Macmillan Cancer Support, that she realised she still had a great deal to offer and she could once again feel ‘useful’ to others.

Here she explains how the project has helped her to rediscover herself…

“I have always been a people person and I was passionate about helping anyone in a difficult place or who was struggling. My work, first as a counsellor and then as an employment advisor for Hertfordshire County Council helping adults with disabilities get into paid employment, meant I  had always been in a caring role.

“But after being diagnosed with breast cancer and undergoing a double lumpectomy I fell into quite a dark depression. For a long time I didn’t want to leave the house. Whenever I did go out I felt like everyone was looking at me or people were expecting me to be how I had always been – bubbly and outgoing. But all of a sudden I didn’t want, or feel able to be like that. I couldn’t see the point of anything anymore and I couldn’t explain that to anyone.

“There was no history of cancer in my family, so when I was diagnosed it came totally out of the blue. About 18 months earlier I had tripped at the top of the stairs and slipped three discs in my neck. That was the beginning of my health problems.

“In February 2016, I went to see my doctor because I felt tired all the time. I thought I had low iron because of the medication I was taking for my neck problems. I mentioned that my right nipple kept popping in and out and the doctor immediately referred me to a breast clinic.

“I didn’t think anything of it. I thought I was having an early mammogram because I was in the early stages of menopause but when the doctor told me she could see a lump under my nipple, suddenly everything slowed right down and it was as if she was talking about someone else. I was in complete shock. I thought I needed iron tablets but the next thing I knew I was having tests for breast cancer.

“They did a biopsy and when the results came through I was told it was cancer. An MRI scan found a second smaller lump deep in the tissue. I was looking at a double lumpectomy and possibly a mastectomy.

“The double lumpectomy was a success but it was at that point that depression really took hold. I had lost trust in my body. I couldn’t trust something that I hadn’t considered I needed to look out for. It was like stepping on a landmine and a bomb going off without warning and I had no idea if there were any more bombs out there or if I was going to step on another one. I also wasn’t sleeping properly. I felt so tired but I couldn’t quieten my mind. I was horizon-scanning all the time but I didn’t know what for. 

“One of the Macmillan Nurses recommended that I go on a HOPE (Help Overcoming Problems Effectively) course at the Peace Hospice in Watford. It was there that I saw a box of soaps that said ‘please take me home’. Each soap had a little note on it saying what to do. I took a block of lemon soap which smelt amazing.

“The note said to carve the soap into a shape that represents how you feel. I’d never done anything like that before but I didn’t think about it too much, I just did it. I thought I’d like to make a tortoise because a tortoise represented exactly how I felt. Outside I had a shell, I looked fine and well, but inside I felt completely at odds with how people perceived me. I still couldn’t understand or believe what had happened to me and I felt totally trapped and lost. Everything was going so fast and everyone was going about their business as normal but inside I felt a total mess and I just needed to slow right down. I needed to take life slowly.

“In January this year I had a call from Annalie Ashwell, a Macmillan Wellbeing and Therapeutic Coordinator who works at both The Hospice of St Francis and Peace Hospice Care. She asked me if I would like to help come up with a narrative and make an animation film with all the soaps. I was thrilled that someone wanted something from me, that I had purpose and a direction and could do something helpful.

“The Art Bag project has massively helped me find myself again. It’s helped me to get out there and try life again. For me it’s a new challenge and something completely different to what I’m used to. It’s also given me the chance to meet and talk to people who have gone through a similar experience.

“Helping to come up with a story with all the soaps that people have carved and create an animation film with them was the first step on the road to becoming me again. Seeing something through from start to finish and doing something to help other people at the beginning of their diagnosis realise that there is help out there meets a need in me and this project has helped me to realise that I have something worthwhile to contribute to society.

“It also feels very purifying. Soap is for cleansing and this project has helped me to break down the debris that was left from my illness and pull me through to the other side. I am grateful to be where I am today. This time last year I could never have believed I would have come so far.”