This article explores the dual perspectives of cancer care – the clinical and the mind-body/holistic – emphasizing the importance of bridging these views for a more compassionate approach.
By Dr Sylvester J Lim PsyD, CHt, NCAPS, MCMA
Growing up, I remember the word “cancer” was a huge taboo – at best, people whispered it as the “C” word. Even today, in 2025, it’s still a word that stops conversations.
Over the years, I’ve sat with clients who whispered it, shouted it, or tried not to say it at all. And closer to home, I’ve watched loved ones walk that path – sometimes living far beyond what statistics predicted, reminding me that numbers can’t fully measure the human will to live, to hope, to keep going.
In those moments, I’ve wondered: what would it feel like to hold both?
The clinical precision of medicine – statistics, treatment plans, measurable outcomes – and the softer, resilient strength of hope, belief, and the mind-body spirit that can’t be graphed or charted as easily.
Purpose: Diagnose, stage, and treat disease – targeting tumors, cells, and biomarkers.
Strengths:
Limitations:
Purpose: Recognizes cancer as not only a disease of cells, but an experience touching the whole person – body, mind, and spirit.
Strengths:
Limitations:
Analogy: The clinical view is like a microscope – sharp, precise, focused on disease. The mind-body view is like a wide lens – seeing the whole person, their story, and context. Together, we see more clearly.
During my years working in cancer awareness, oncologists and survivors alike often reminded me: “Don’t let the numbers define the person.” Survival rates matter – but so does remembering that some will belong to the group that heals, not just the group that succumbs. Hope isn’t false when it’s grounded in compassion, honesty, and possibility.
Shared risks if we don't bridge these views:
I share these reflections not as an oncologist, but as a psychologist who believes in the mind- body – and spirit – connection; and as someone who has seen, both personally and professionally, how deeply cancer touches more than the body alone.
My hope is that each person facing cancer is seen as more than a diagnosis: as a parent, sibling, child, friend, dreamer – still growing, still loving, still becoming.
And perhaps, by bringing together what science offers and what the heart remembers, we can create a gentler, wiser way to walk this path – so that living with cancer becomes not only about surviving, but about truly living.
Note:
These reflections come from my experience and observations in mind-body healing. I am not an oncology specialist – simply someone striving to make a small difference by sharing what I’ve come to know – and staying open to what others might teach me through their stories.
A Proud Member of
The Complementary Medical Association
(UK)