Cancer PTSD is the part of illness that rarely gets named.
It's what can linger long after treatment ends.
The constant scanning.
The fear that returns without warning.
The sense that your body no longer feels safe, even when the doctors say you're "stable."
This book is for people living with the psychological and nervous-system impact of cancer - during illness, after treatment, or years into survivorship - who recognise that survival did not mean resolution.
Rather than offering cures, positivity, or rigid recovery plans, Cancer PTSD focuses on understanding what prolonged medical threat does to the body and mind. It explains why symptoms such as hypervigilance, anxiety, numbness, irritability, fatigue, and loss of trust in the body are not personal failures, but natural responses to extended stress and uncertainty.
Written in clear, compassionate language, this book helps you:
Understand cancer-related trauma without pathologising yourself
Make sense of symptoms that don't fit neat recovery narratives
Learn how safety, rhythm, and gentleness support nervous-system stabilisation
Reduce self-blame when healing is uneven or slow
Find steadier ways to live alongside uncertainty, rather than fighting it
Cancer PTSD is not a replacement for medical or psychological care. It is a companion - offering validation, language, and perspective for people who feel unseen in the space between treatment and "being fine again."
This book stands alone, while also sitting alongside other works by James Barrett that explore life after illness and major disruption.
About the Author
James Barrett is the author of multiple books exploring illness, recovery, and life after major rupture. His work is informed by lived experience, trauma-aware principles, and a focus on nervous-system safety rather than forced resilience. He writes for people navigating the long, quieter aftermath of illness - where adaptation continues even when survival is no longer the question.