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‘Let me be your miracle’: Amanda Phillips has defied death for a decade

Amanda Phillips was diagnosed with stage four cancer and told she had weeks to live. That was a decade ago.

Concerns over breast cancer treatment delays in Queensland

Amanda Phillips has been defying death for the last decade, keeping her stage four breast cancer in “check”.

The 49-year-old said for her having cancer is like a game of chess and although she’s had the upper hand on her terminal diagnosis for the last 10 years the artist received news last month the cancer had spread again.

Recent scans showed Ms Phillips’ sternum had been infiltrated by cancer, so much so it fractured from the pressure.

A few weeks ago she began a new “next-generation” chemotherapy called Enhertu in hopes to keep the cancer at bay.

“Let’s get this back in checkmate again,” the Modbury woman said.

Amanda Phillips has begun a new chemotherapy in hopes to keep her cancer at bay. Picture: Matt Loxton
Amanda Phillips has begun a new chemotherapy in hopes to keep her cancer at bay. Picture: Matt Loxton
Amanda Phillips at the Oncology Day Centre, Royal Adelaide Hospital, first treatment in 2013, with her mother Stephanie. Picture: Alexander Waite Mitchell
Amanda Phillips at the Oncology Day Centre, Royal Adelaide Hospital, first treatment in 2013, with her mother Stephanie. Picture: Alexander Waite Mitchell
Amanda Phillips at Mount Lofty Botanical Gardens in 2014. Picture: Sarah Reed
Amanda Phillips at Mount Lofty Botanical Gardens in 2014. Picture: Sarah Reed

Ms Phillips was first diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer back in October 2013 when she was 39 years old.

Her doctor passed her a box of tissues when they delivered the life-altering news.

“I pushed the box of tissues away,” she said.

“I had tears streaming down my face and I looked straight at my oncologist and I said ‘let me be your miracle’.”

She had noticed a pea-sized lump protruding from her breast before she went to the doctor.

“It was sort of like Princess and the Pea, it was very small but it was very significant,” she said.

Scans revealed the lump was cancerous and it had already spread to her spine.

Doctors had no hope Ms Phillips would survive months, let alone a decade.

Amanda Phillips and partner Alexander Waite Mitchell in 2015. Picure: Stephanie Wotzke
Amanda Phillips and partner Alexander Waite Mitchell in 2015. Picure: Stephanie Wotzke
Amanda Phillips at the Oncology Day Centre, Royal Adelaide Hospital, in 2016. Picture: Alexander Waite Mitchell
Amanda Phillips at the Oncology Day Centre, Royal Adelaide Hospital, in 2016. Picture: Alexander Waite Mitchell

Ms Phillips who works as a director, choreographer, performer and artist does not call her health battle a “journey”.

“To me, life is the journey, this is just something that’s happening in my life,” she said.

“I don’t define myself by my cancer, I’m more than my cancer … I don’t want it to define me.”

Amanda Phillips in Melbourne in 2017. Picture: Alexander Waite Mitchell.
Amanda Phillips in Melbourne in 2017. Picture: Alexander Waite Mitchell.
Amanda Phillips running on the beach at Yorke Peninsula in 2018. Photo: Alexander Waite Mitchell
Amanda Phillips running on the beach at Yorke Peninsula in 2018. Photo: Alexander Waite Mitchell

Since the day of her initial diagnosis Ms Phillips has attended Royal Adelaide Hospital’s oncology day centre every three weeks for treatment.

“Once you’re stage four your treatment is indefinite … stage four is a train ride, there is no remission.

“I know that I’m standing in grace … I’m very grateful to be here … I have no intention of turning my back on life.”

Whenever she sits in the “chemo chair” she’s reminded “how precious life is”.

“I do feel like I have an angel on my shoulder,” she said.

“Every day since the diagnosis there’s been that reminder that there’s not much that separates us from life and death.”

Amanda Phillips, Canberra in 2021. Picture: Alexander Waite Mitchell
Amanda Phillips, Canberra in 2021. Picture: Alexander Waite Mitchell
Amanda Phillips with Sidonie Henbest (left)at the Emma Hack Gallery SALA opening in 2022. Picture: Antoinette Causby
Amanda Phillips with Sidonie Henbest (left)at the Emma Hack Gallery SALA opening in 2022. Picture: Antoinette Causby
Amanda Phillips in character as the Butterfly Queen at "Celestial Gardens" in 2023. Picture: Alexander Waite Mitchell
Amanda Phillips in character as the Butterfly Queen at "Celestial Gardens" in 2023. Picture: Alexander Waite Mitchell

“Your life is short, we all know that … so how do you make an impact with the time we’ve got because time is finite.

“We all leave our mark, we all leave our trace and so it really makes me think about what impact I can leave through my art or my person.

“What are we remembered by? What makes life memorable? How can we leave a legacy, even if that legacy is kindness to another human.

“I do think about that often, daily in fact.”

If you’d like to support Ms Phillips, click here.

Originally published as ‘Let me be your miracle’: Amanda Phillips has defied death for a decade

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Original URL: https://www.couriermail.com.au/news/south-australia/let-me-be-your-miracle-amanda-phillips-has-defied-death-for-a-decade/news-story/2913b8ac841207ac801bf73feab142d9