INSIGHTS FROM A CANCER SURVIVOR-ADVOCATE
Lessons in Movement, Purpose, and Paying It Forward
From an exclusive interview with SCOTT BAKER / 4x Cancer Survivor
Edited by: Lennard M. Goetze, Ed.D | Daniel Root
![]() |
| "...that moment with Jason meant more to me than I expected. It reminded me how powerful human connection can be in the middle of illness." |
Cancer has a way of changing everything. It changes how you look at time, at your body, at the people around you, and at the meaning of being alive. When I was first diagnosed at 29, I didn’t realize that cancer would shape the rest of my life—not just medically, but personally and spiritually.
Over the years, I’ve faced cancer four separate times, including a battle with brain lymphoma. But what those experiences gave me was a perspective I never expected: a responsibility to help others navigate the road I’ve already walked. My mission now isn’t just surviving—it’s helping other people survive too.
Through advocacy, speaking engagements, patient visits, and simple conversations, I try to share what I’ve learned from living through cancer treatment and recovery. Survivorship isn’t just about making it through therapy—it’s about learning how to live again with purpose, resilience, and compassion.
Movement
as Medicine: My Journey with Exercise Oncology
One of the most important lessons
I’ve learned through cancer is that movement matters. I had never even heard the term exercise
oncology until recently, but the truth is I’ve been living it for decades.
“I have never heard the term exercise oncology,” I’ve said before, “but I’ve
been living it for 27 years.” When I was first diagnosed, all I could
think about was getting back to the gym. For me, the gym represented healing.
It represented normal life. And as I went through treatment after treatment,
that belief stayed with me. If all I could do was walk, then I walked. And I
walked a lot.
Sometimes that meant a long walk around the neighborhood. Other days it meant just making it to the mailbox. But movement—any movement—meant progress.
Chemotherapy and cancer treatment take a serious toll on the body. The drugs attack fast-growing cells, which means they affect far more than the cancer itself. I lost my sense of taste. My digestive system was wrecked. I experienced brain fog—what many patients call “chemo brain.” And the exhaustion is hard to explain to someone who hasn’t lived through it. It’s not just being tired—it’s a deep physical depletion.
But I learned something important: even small movement helps the body fight back.
Exercise helps circulation. It helps the body process medications. It helps clear toxins from the system. And maybe most importantly, it gives you back a sense of control.
There are many things cancer patients can’t control. We can’t control the cells in our bodies that start behaving badly. But there are things we can control. We can control how we move. We can control how we manage stress. And we can control the food we put into our bodies.
For me, those became the three pillars of survival. Today I still participate in the Livestrong program at the YMCA, working out alongside other cancer survivors in 12-week training groups. I’ve been doing it for more than a decade now. Every time I walk into that room, I’m reminded that movement is one of the most powerful tools we have in the fight against cancer.
The
Hidden Cost of Cancer Treatment
Cancer treatment saves lives, but
it doesn’t come without a price. Chemotherapy is incredibly powerful medicine.
It can wipe out cancer cells and give people a second chance at life. But it
also puts enormous stress on the body.
Patients lose strength. They lose stamina. Many struggle with neurological effects like brain fog and difficulty concentrating. The fatigue can feel overwhelming. That’s why movement is so important—even when it feels impossible. I always encourage patients to start small.
Some days your victory may simply be standing up and walking down the hallway. Other days it might be a three-mile walk. The key is not comparing one day to another. If you move, you’re winning.
NO ONE RISES ALONE What Almost Dying Taught Me About Living- By Scott Baker Copyright © 2025 |
Paying
It Forward
One of the most meaningful parts of survivorship for me has been learning the importance of paying it forward. When I underwent a stem cell transplant for brain lymphoma, I was placed in isolation for weeks. It was one of the most difficult periods of my life.
Then something unexpected happened. A woman named Rosalie came into my hospital room. She had the exact same disease I had, and she had gone through the exact same transplant two years earlier. Seeing her that day completely changed how I looked at the next month of treatment. Suddenly I wasn’t just facing the unknown—I was seeing proof that someone else had survived it. That visit gave me hope.
Years later, I had the chance to do the same thing for another patient named Jason who was undergoing the same transplant. I went to Sloan Kettering to sit with him for about an hour, just to talk and share my experience. To me, paying it forward means giving someone something that someone once gave you when you needed it most. That moment with Jason meant more to me than I expected. It reminded me how powerful human connection can be in the middle of illness.
The
Role of Advocacy
Cancer advocacy often starts with a
simple idea: be useful to someone else. During my treatments, the nurses who
cared for me became some of my greatest inspirations. They didn’t just
administer medication or monitor vital signs. They treated me like family. They
treated me like their own son.
That level of compassion stuck with me. I realized I might not be able to wear scrubs or a white coat, but there had to be another way I could help people.
Over the years I’ve found many ways to do that. I visit patients in hospitals. I speak to students and community groups. I participate in donor-registry drives encouraging people to become stem-cell donors. I share my story wherever it might help someone who is struggling.
Advocacy doesn’t always require a formal title. Sometimes it simply means showing up for someone who needs encouragement. And when you do that, something interesting happens—you receive something back. Helping someone else reminds you that your own struggle had purpose.
Outreach,
Storytelling, and Social Media
In today’s world, outreach also happens online. Social media has become an incredibly powerful tool for cancer advocacy. A single post can reach thousands of patients, survivors, physicians, and caregivers around the world. That reach matters. Sharing stories online creates connections. It helps survivors find each other. It helps newly diagnosed patients realize they’re not alone. For advocates like me, the goal isn’t fame or attention. It’s visibility for hope. The more stories we share, the more people realize that survivorship is possible.
Living
with Purpose
Today my life looks very different than it did before cancer. I spend time speaking at colleges, encouraging young people to join stem-cell donor registries. I continue my exercise programs with other survivors. And I try to make myself available whenever someone needs encouragement.
If cancer taught me anything, it’s that survival carries responsibility. When you make it through something that difficult, you have knowledge others don’t yet have. And that knowledge can become a lifeline for someone else. That’s why I keep telling my story.
Because somewhere out there is a patient sitting in a hospital room, wondering if they’ll make it.
And if hearing my story helps them believe they can—then everything I went through has meaning.



























