Riding the waves off Nova Scotia, this surfer says she felt cancer-free - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Riding the waves off Nova Scotia, this surfer says she felt cancer-free

Just over a month after a double mastectomy, Amber Spurrell of Dartmouth was back on her surfboard. The ocean served as therapy after a diagnosis of stage 2 breast cancer, says the Dartmouth woman.

'I needed to be held, and the ocean did that for me,' says Amber Spurrell of Dartmouth

Amber Spurrell used surfing as a way to cope with the stresses of cancer. (Steve Lawrence/ CBC)

It could be the most beautiful summer day in Nova Scotiaor the harshest day of winter; if there arewaves, AmberSpurrellwill surf.

Even while undergoing six rounds of chemotherapy.

"Getting in the ocean allowed me not to have cancer for a few minutes and just be," saysSpurrell, 42, who was diagnosed last year with breast cancer.

At 27, Spurrell met her biological mother for the first time and learned that her family had a history of breast cancer.

Spurrellhad yearly mammogramsthroughout her 30s, but her annual screening in 2020was cancelled due to the pandemic. On June 21, 2021, the Dartmouth womanlearned that she had stage 2 breast cancer.

She underwent a double mastectomy 15 days later and found outshe wouldn't be able to lie down on a surfboard for weeks.

"My main concern washow am I going to surf without my boobs?" she says.

Spurrell feared she'd no longer be able to surf after being diagnosed with stage 2 breast cancer and undergoing a double mastectomy. (Steve Lawrence/CBC News)

All Spurrell wanted was to get back in the water. Itdidn't take her long to pop up to her feet.

She had to make adjustments like surfing with foam in her wetsuit to protect her chest, but just 33 days after her surgery, Spurrell was back gliding across waves along Nova Scotia's Eastern Shore.

"I needed to be held," she says."And the ocean did that for me."

Surfing as a form of healing

Using nature specifically water as a form of healing isn't a new idea.

There are more than 50 surf therapy programs worldwide that use surfing to promote well-being, accordingto the International Surf Therapy Organization, a Los Angeles-based advocacy and research group.

Counselling therapist Shelby Miller of Stewiacke, N.S.,says surfing can help people enter what's known as the brain'sflow state, when an individual is completely absorbed in an activity.

Miller plans tolaunchSea Clear Therapeutics next month after beinginspired by a documentary about surfing as an alternative form of therapy for veterans dealing with PTSD.

Counselling therapist Shelby Miller says surfing can help people enter what's known as the brain'sflow state, when an individual is completely absorbed in an activity. (Robert Guertin/CBC)

"Surf therapy is pretty cool because it's not a lot of talking and a whole lot of surfing," Miller says.

She added that surf therapy can be an optionfor people who have a hard time coming to therapy and talking about their issues.

"It just takes you out of what you're experiencing and brings you into the experience of surfing," she says.

Spurrell considered surfing to be her personal form of treatment as she battled cancer.There were times where she didn't have the energy to paddle into waves or pop up.

Spurrell says getting in the water made her feel like herself again. (Will McLernon/CBC News)

But witnessing the sounds of waves crashing, inhaling the salty air ofthebeach, and feeling the frigid water splash across her face was the distraction she needed.

"I needed that suffering more than I needed to be at home laying on the couch," she says. "I just wanted to be motivated by the elements. They drive me."

N.S. woman uses ocean to cope with cancer diagnosis

2 years ago
Duration 3:51
Dartmouth woman Amber Spurrell was diagnosed last year with stage 2 breast cancer. After a double mastectomy, Spurrell has been using surfing to strengthen her body and mind during her cancer treatment. Will McLernon has her story.

Spurrell's road to recovery

Spurrell is currently in immunotherapy. She will be in treatment every three weeks until November followed by hormone therapyfor the next five years. She feels her muscles coming back, but still struggles with heart tiredness and brain fog.

She will continue to use surfing to feel like herself again.

"Cancer is the hardest thingI've ever gone through, but the elements you experience while surfing got me through it," she says.

"It's still healing me."

Spurrell says the surf community rallied around her both in and out of the water. A fundraiser by Nova Scotia surfers raised $18,000 in just two days to help Spurrell pay for treatment and take time off from teaching. (Steve Lawrence/CBC)

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story incorrectly stated Sea Clear Therapeutics is the first surf therapy program in Nova Scotia. This version has been corrected.
    Jun 01, 2022 12:19 PM AT