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Educational Library
Explore our library of Movement, Rehabilitation, and Wellness strategies. A dedicated resource for patients, survivors, and clinicians to ensure safety through every phase of the cancer journey.
Symptom-Focused Guides
Flare‑Ups and Setbacks: How to Safely Step Back, Then Build Up Again
Why flare‑ups and setbacks happen in survivorship Recovery after cancer is rarely a straight line. A week of feeling strong can be followed by days of crushing fatigue, pain spikes, nausea, or breathlessness, sometimes with no obvious trigger. These ups and downs can be discouraging and make it tempting to abandon movement altogether. A more realistic—and safer—approach is to plan for setbacks: step down when your body needs it, then rebuild gradually when symptoms ease. Even
4 min read
Pain and Movement: When Gentle Exercise Can Help and When It Cannot
How exercise interacts with pain in people with cancer Pain is one of the most common and disruptive symptoms during and after cancer treatment. It can make it hard to sleep, move, work, or enjoy time with others, and it often comes from multiple sources at once—surgery, radiation, chemotherapy, endocrine therapy, nerve injury, bone disease, or simple deconditioning. That complexity makes it hard to know when movement will help and when it might cause harm. Understanding how
5 min read
Sleep Problems in Survivorship: Using Activity to Reset Your Rhythm
Why sleep is disrupted in survivorship Sleep problems are one of the most persistent complaints after cancer treatment. Survivors often describe lying awake at night, waking frequently, or feeling exhausted during the day but suddenly “wired” at bedtime. These changes are more than just annoying—they affect fatigue, mood, thinking, and long‑term health. While exercise is not a sedative, it is a powerful daytime signal that can help nudge your body clock back toward a more pre
4 min read
Swelling and Lymphedema: Everyday Strategies Plus Exercise Tips
Understanding swelling and lymphedema after cancer Swelling after cancer treatment can be uncomfortable, worrying, and—when it is lymphedema—long‑term. For some, it shows up as a heavy, tight arm after breast surgery; for others, it affects a leg, breast, or head and neck area. Many survivors wonder whether moving the limb will make things worse and feel torn between protecting it and wanting to stay active. The good news: with the right self‑care and a cautious, progressive
4 min read
Managing Weight Changes After Treatment With Movement
Why weight often changes after cancer treatment Weight changes after cancer treatment are common—and confusing. Some people gain weight even when they feel exhausted and less hungry; others struggle to keep any weight or muscle on at all. Neither pattern is “your fault,” and both can affect long‑term health and how strong you feel in daily life. Movement will not fix weight alone, but it is a key lever for protecting muscle, shaping body composition, and supporting heart, met
4 min read
Exercise During Hormone Therapy: Hot Flashes, Weight, and Mood
Why hormone therapy makes side effects feel so big Hormone therapy is a powerful part of treatment for many breast and prostate cancers. By lowering estrogen or testosterone, it can significantly reduce recurrence risk—but it can also change how your body feels day to day. Hot flashes, joint pain, weight gain, and mood shifts are common and can make it harder to stay on treatment. Exercise cannot remove every side effect, but it can soften many of them and help you feel more
5 min read
Nausea Days vs. Better Days: Adjusting Your Movement Plan
Why nausea and movement need to be balanced Nausea is one of the most draining symptoms during cancer treatment. It can creep in before chemotherapy, linger for days afterward, or come in waves that make eating, drinking, and moving feel risky. When every movement seems like it might trigger a new wave, it is understandable to avoid activity altogether. Yet, staying completely inactive can worsen fatigue, sleep, appetite, and mood—factors that can make nausea feel even harder
4 min read
Shortness of Breath: Safe Activity When Breathing Is Harder
Why breathlessness happens in cancer and survivorship Shortness of breath (dyspnea) is a common and distressing symptom in people with cancer. It can show up during treatment or years later and may make even small tasks—like showering or walking across a room—feel daunting. Understandably, many people start to avoid activity altogether. Yet, completely stopping movement can weaken muscles, reduce fitness, and ultimately make breathlessness worse. This article explains why bre
4 min read
Managing Peripheral Neuropathy With Balance and Strength Work
Why peripheral neuropathy affects balance and strength Peripheral neuropathy is a common, often long‑lasting side effect of cancer treatment. It can make feet feel numb or “jelly‑like,” hands clumsy, and balance less reliable. These changes are unsettling and can limit independence—but they do not mean you must stop moving. The right mix of balance and strength exercises can help your body adapt, reduce fall risk, and make everyday movement feel safer. Peripheral neuropathy r
5 min read
Joint Pain and Stiffness: Gentle Exercises That Can Help
Joint pain from treatments like hormone therapy, chemotherapy, or long periods of inactivity can make it hard to move—but staying still often makes stiffness worse. Gentle, regular motion helps keep joints nourished and muscles supportive. Why gentle exercise helps sore joints Movement circulates joint fluid, which acts like natural lubrication, making motion feel smoother. Light strengthening supports the muscles around joints, so they absorb more load and the joint itself
5 min read
Moving Through Cancer‑Related Fatigue: Pacing and Energy Budgeting
Why pacing and energy budgeting matter in cancer‑related fatigue Cancer‑related fatigue affects most people during treatment and many survivors afterward. It can be physical, mental, and emotional—and it often does not respond to rest alone. Since there is no quick cure, self‑management strategies such as pacing, energy conservation, and light exercise become central tools for living your life around fatigue instead of under it. Energy budgeting does not mean giving up activ
4 min read
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