When Beth Marren suspects she has advanced cancer, her life does not become a story of miraculous recovery. It becomes a fight for truth. Blocked from second opinions and silenced by overlapping layers of medical authority-from the NHS to private healthcare, from Scotland to Paris to Oslo-Beth is forced to pursue answers across borders and institutions simply to access the truth about her own body. She adopts an alias. She bends rules. She refuses to disappear quietly. What she encounters defies medicine, logic, and professional ethics. With every closed door, one question becomes harder to dismiss: was this a staggering array of unconnected incompetence-or was something being deliberately withheld? At its core, this book is a confrontation with power: a demand for dignity, autonomy, and the fundamental right of a competent patient to be fully informed about their own life and death. It is also a deeply personal reckoning with faith, as long-held beliefs fracture under the weight of suffering that feels both arbitrary and cruel. But this is not only a story of resistance. It is a story of love. Every risk taken was for her children-for time measured not in statistics, but in moments they might one day remember. Part memoir, part medical expos , this book gives voice to those silenced by powerful systems and asks a question medicine can no longer afford to ignore: If access to truth might improve survival, what does it say about a system that withholds it?
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