『Navigating Sex and Intimacy After Cancer With Humor and Honesty』のカバーアート

Navigating Sex and Intimacy After Cancer With Humor and Honesty

Navigating Sex and Intimacy After Cancer With Humor and Honesty

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2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

On this episode of the Cancer and Comedy Podcast, Dr. Brad Miller and Deb Krier open up about a topic that almost never makes it into the exam room—but lives in the bedroom, the bathroom, and the mirror:

What happens to sex, intimacy, and feeling “like a man” or “like a woman” after cancer?

Speaking from their own stories—Brad as a prostate cancer survivor and Deb as a breast cancer survivor—they have a candid, funny, and deeply compassionate conversation about living in a changed body, navigating desire, and redefining closeness when spontaneity, sensation, and confidence all get shaken.

In this honest, tender, and laugh‑out‑loud real conversation, Brad and Deb share:

  • Walking through prostate cancer and its impact on masculinity, erections, continence, and self-worth
  • Choosing a double mastectomy with no reconstruction—and what everyday life is like living “flat”
  • Grieving the loss of sensation, spontaneity, and the familiar body you once knew
  • Navigating pumps, injections, and implants as real—but far from glamorous—options for intimacy
  • Managing prosthetics and “knitted knockers” and the awkward logistics of putting boobs on (and taking them off)
  • Shifting roles from patient and caregiver back to partners and lovers
  • Facing unspoken fears about identity, attractiveness, and whether sex is really “over”
  • Reclaiming closeness through cuddling, hand-holding, and non-sexual touch
  • Starting honest conversations with doctors about sex, even when they avoid the topic
  • Deciding when and how to talk about scars in the world of dating and new relationships
  • Finding moments of humor in the most uncomfortable situations—because sometimes if you don’t laugh, you cry

This episode isn’t a how‑to manual for “perfect sex after cancer.” It’s a real-world guide to:

  • Talking about the hard stuff instead of pretending it’s fine
  • Redefining intimacy when your body has been cut, stitched, and rearranged
  • Giving yourself and your partner grace, patience, and permission to laugh

If cancer has changed your body, your sex life, or the way you see yourself in the mirror, this conversation will help you:

  • Feel less alone in the awkward and the unspoken,
  • Start the conversations you’ve been avoiding—with your partner and your doctors, and
  • Find hope, humor, and new ways to be close in a “new normal” you didn’t choose.

Together, we can keep turning the grim realities of cancer into the grin of a life still full of love, touch, and connection.

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