 I was diagnosed quite unexpectedly with stage 3 cancer. As I was nearing the end of my operations, I wanted to document my scars. I remember asking a friend of mine, I said to her, can you take some pictures? And we just sort of had a laugh of it and we took these pictures and I was like, alright, you know, let me know when they're ready. She brought them in, I was in tears. They were so powerful and they came out so strong and I said, imagine if we could get a group of women to take these pictures and we could showcase them to raise awareness of cancer in our community. So that was my buying for the women was that if you're going to do this, we need you to tell your story and it's going to be difficult and it's going to be hard. With Black Memorising, it's more than just the charity. You build friendships with everyone who you meet. I don't know what I'd do without these girls, I'm really done. So yeah, it's been brilliant. I was treading water, now I feel like I'm swimming, you know, and I'm not doing it alone. In our community, we don't see young black women getting breast cancer. Cultural myths and taboos are stopping people from talking, reaching out. Sorry, I always get emotional when I talk to them about this. I remember my oncologist, she said to me, I need you to go back into your community and I need you to tell people that chemo isn't bad and that this could save their life. When we opened our charity, the lottery was the first money we applied for the exhibition and we got it. We were able to print the pictures and we were able to do an amazing exhibition and the project went viral. People just had goosebumps, it was electrifying. Once they started and they started to see the love and support from the audience, they couldn't stop. Some people cried, some people laughed and that's why we've called it the untold cancer stories because people don't hear them enough. The poem says, phenomenal woman, that's the woman right there, she's amazing. So we've got the title now for the first black cancer scar exhibition. In the world I think, I think in the world.