Cancer Survivor Storyteller Lab:

Your Story Didn’t

End with Surviving Cancer.

It’s Waiting to Be Told.

You’ve lived through something profound.
Now you can gently shape it into a story that brings clarity, connection, and meaning,
on your terms, in your time.

Turn scattered memories into a story that feels clear and grounded

  • Feel more at peace with your experience

  • Express your story in a way that feels safe, honest, and true

  • Create something lasting—for yourself, your loved ones, or someone who needs hope

  • Be understood… sometimes for the first time

You don’t need the right words yet.
You just need the feeling that your story matters.

A note from Eva

I am a 30-year professional storyteller and stage IV cancer survivor. After treatment, I was alive but I didn’t yet know how to hold what I had been through. So I began a quieter process. Not telling my story right away, but listening to it. Shaping it. Understanding it. Finding the meaning inside it. Over time, my story became something I could share, not from a place of pain, but from clarity. And everywhere I spoke, something kept happening. People would come up to me and say, “I have a story too… I just don’t know how to tell it.”

That’s why I created Cancer Survivor Storyteller Lab.

Together, we'll discover what your story wants to become; gently, safely, in your own way.

PLUS Receive these bonuses:

A one-time 50% off !

This is my genuine gratitude for showing me how many people want this, a gift to me. Here's mine back.

My Story Legacy

A 12-page guide to coax your stories to the surface. Fill it out, even in part, and your family will have your memories, values, and voice preserved. A gift to them. And honestly, a beautiful foundation for a eulogy someday. 

Invitation

A personal invitation from me when the lab opens.

Save my place in the Story Lab

You are always in control of your story. You can keep it private, share it, or simply understand it more deeply.

You can join the waitlist even if you’re not sure yet.

Your story isn’t finished. It’s waiting to be shaped.