Chronic Pain Drove Me to Despair, but Cancer Taught Me to Heal
After 38 years living with pain, I've become passionate about the pain-cancer connection.
Dec 16, 2020
Aug 11, 2022
Real Women, Real StoriesCo-Founder, For Grace
Cynthia Toussaint serves as spokesperson at For Grace and has had complex regional pain syndrome for 38 years. She later developed fibromylagia and other overlapping, autoimmune conditions. In 2020, she became a breast cancer survivor.
Cynthia founded For Grace in 2002 to raise awareness about CRPS and five years later expanded the organization's mission to include all women in pain. Before becoming ill, she was an accomplished ballerina and worked professionally as a dancer, actor and singer.
Since 1997, Cynthia has been a leading advocate for women in pain, raising awareness through local, national and worldwide media as well as public speaking. Toussaint championed and gave key testimony at two California Senate informational hearings. The first, in May 2001, was dedicated to CRPS awareness. The second took place in February 2004 and explored the chronic undertreatment of and gender bias toward women in pain. Both of these efforts were the first of their kind in the nation.
In 2006, Toussaint ran for the California State Assembly to bring attention to her CRPS Education Bill that Governor Schwarzenegger vetoed after she got it to his desk in its first year. Her next bill, a seven-year effort, was signed into law by Governor Jerry Brown in 2015. This Step Therapy legislation reformed an unethical prescription practice used by the health insurance industry to save money in a way that increased the suffering of California pain patients.
Toussaint was the first CRPS sufferer to be featured in the New York Times, Los Angeles Times and on the Public Broadcasting System and National Public Radio. She is a consultant for The Discovery Channel, ABC News, FOX News, the National Pain Report and PainPathways, the official magazine of the World Institute of Pain. Also, she is a guide and guest contributor for Maria Shriver's Architects of Change website.
Her many speaking engagements include the National Institutes of Health, Capitol Hill and the World Health Organization.
Toussaint is also the author of “Battle for Grace: A Memoir of Pain, Redemption and Impossible Love.” In addition, Toussaint is experiencing her first-ever partial CRPS remission largely due to the narrative therapy of writing this book.
She continues to be a leading advocate for healthcare reform in California. She was instrumental in changing public opinion, which sparked sweeping HMO reform legislation that was signed by Governor Gray Davis in 1999. Her focus has now shifted to creating a single-payer, universal healthcare plan in California that would provide a model for the rest of the country.
In 2019, Toussaint was diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer caused by generational trauma and CRPS. Her work is now strongly reflecting her passion for the pain-cancer connection and trauma as a major driver for chronic illness.
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After 38 years living with pain, I've become passionate about the pain-cancer connection.
As told to Diana Whitney
Looking back, I had the perfect life. At 21, I was an accomplished ballerina, singer and actor — the triple threat. Then one day in ballet class, I tore my hamstring.
I'd always worked through pain before, but this pain was different. I could no longer dance ballet six hours a day, so I got a job in an illusion act. I had to crawl during the day in order to perform at night. I went from having the best life in the world to having a life that was literally torture.
And I knew it wasn't just a torn hamstring. I remember looking in the mirror while dancing in Las Vegas and thinking, it's all over. I thought I had gangrene, and they were going to amputate my leg, because it would turn purple and swollen. But it was the excruciating, burning pain that consumed me. I thought I could take anything, but I couldn't take that level of constant pain.
Then one day the pain spread from my right leg into my left, which made no sense. That's when I moved back in with my mother in Northern California. It was my worst nightmare. I'd always been so driven and known exactly what I wanted to do, and I was lucky to be good at the things I loved. Until I couldn't do them anymore.
The doctors said it was all in my head, which is common for women who suffer from chronic pain. One doctor wanted me to take a truth serum to prove I was making it all up. I was diagnosed with "stage fright" and "tendonitis from Mars." My physicians also told me I was enjoying the "secondary gain" of attention from my partner, John, the wonderful man whom I've now been with for 40 years. He would wheel me into appointments, and I'd feel so ashamed.
The worst thing any doctor said to me was: "You're only a woman. It doesn't really matter. Why don't you just shoot yourself in the head?"
They believed my pain didn't exist, and I was crazy. They kept saying I needed to see a psychiatrist, but they never referred me. My mom and I wrote letter after letter, begging for care, but I never got it.
Years went by, and my siblings and friends moved on with their lives. Even my mom moved on — she was an actor and relocated to New York. Then it was just John and me, and people didn't come by anymore. We were so isolated.
My anxiety took over, and I couldn't see a future. I didn't know then that people with high-impact pain often have anxiety disorders. I felt I was being tortured 24/7. Even while I slept, I would dream about the pain. I had to have a way out, and I became severely depressed and suicidal, imagining freedom from the pain.
I was bedridden, off and on, for a total of 10 years. For five of those years, the mysterious disease moved into my vocal chords and I couldn't speak. They told John and me that we couldn't get married or I'd lose my health insurance. At some point I had a LEEP procedure to treat cervical dysplasia, which I've since been told was unnecessary. Serious complications occurred, and I couldn't have a child.
That was my breaking point. I'd lost so much already. Suicidal ideation became my coping mechanism, although I never did attempt to take my own life. I always told myself it would be tomorrow. I'm lucky to be a strong person with a joyful nature, and even in my darkest times, I knew I wanted to help people.
After 13 and a half years, I finally found a specialist who diagnosed me with complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS). The initial trauma of the hamstring injury had triggered CRPS, and the burning pain spread throughout my body. Although my condition had progressed too far unchecked for a cure, leaving me in need of a wheelchair, I was believed at last. My pain had a name, and I found a new focus.
By then John and I had moved back to Los Angeles, and the Los Angeles Times interviewed me for an article about pain. My story became known in the community, and people began to reach out to me. I connected with other women who were suffering from CRPS, and we envisioned starting a nonprofit. When one of these women took her own life, I knew I had to move forward. I thought of all the women alone in their bedrooms in despair, and I founded For Grace in 2002.
I named the organization after my aunt, Grace, who died from leukemia when she was only 20. Although I never met her, she is an angel to me, guiding me on my mission to improve the lives of women in pain. My dream is that what happened to me will never again happen to another.
Now I see an integrative doctor whose practice is wellness-based rather than fear-based. His approach includes Western medicine, as well as holistic alternatives and self-care.
I'd always told myself that if I ever got cancer, I wouldn't treat it because of the pain. But then I felt a lump in my breast and was diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer, the most aggressive form there is. It was devastating, but I'm used to bad news when it comes to my health.
I went to see my pain doctor, who told me, "Cynthia, the inflammation of CRPS pain can cause cancer. So can the chronic stress of family strife."
I've always been a truth-teller, trying to fix my dysfunctional family of origin and the generational trauma that burdens us. But when I got the cancer diagnosis, I could finally let go. I let go of that toxicity and chose to fight for my own life.
Cancer has given me an incredible gift. It's as if the disease told me, OK, I'll give you one last chance to figure this out, to let go of the past and focus on healing. And remarkably, triple-negative breast cancer is the only kind of cancer where you can actually make the tumor go away, if you're a super-responder to chemotherapy.
I was determined to be a super-responder and get rid of that tumor. During six months of chemo, I meditated every day and practiced gratitude. I improved my sleep hygiene, changed my diet to be cancer-hostile, and exercised daily, swimming almost a mile. I surrounded myself with loving friends who supported me.
And my tumor was gone the first week. They said it was impossible. But my body and mind were in touch and working together, and we got a clinical complete response.
The author, triumphant, after going into cancer remission
Now I'm in remission and feeling really good. I've had no increased pain after enduring 17 chemotherapy infusions, which is extraordinary, since I'm wired for pain. And I don't want to frighten women about the pain-cancer connection — I want them to feel empowered and know that healing is available.
Cynthia Toussaint is the founder and spokesperson at For Grace, a nonprofit dedicated to bettering the lives of women in pain. She has lived with complex regional pain syndrome and 15 comorbidities for nearly four decades and became a triple-negative breast cancer survivor in 2020. Cynthia is the author of Battle for Grace: A Memoir of Pain, Redemption and Impossible Love. https://www.forgrace.org