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    <title>every.single.one blog</title>
    <link>https://everysingleone1.com</link>
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    <lastBuildDate>Thu, 28 May 2026 00:18:34 +0300</lastBuildDate>
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      <title>Welcome to the “every.single.one” blog!</title>
      <link>https://everysingleone1.com/blog/tpost/welcome-to-the-every-single-one-blog</link>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 11 May 2026 22:34:00 +0300</pubDate>
      <author>Cherie Sampson</author>
      <description>Moving through cancer with the healing power of the arts</description>
      <turbo:content><![CDATA[<header><h1>Welcome to the “every.single.one” blog!</h1></header><div class="t-redactor__text"><strong><em>“Every. Single. One. of us who has been with this disease is validated, loved and to a certain extent, freed by this image.” </em></strong><br /><br /></div><img src="https://static.tildacdn.com/tild3634-6130-4439-b330-633838333162/Ashes__Soil_1.jpg"><div class="t-redactor__text"><em>"Ashes &amp; Soil"</em> Cherie Sampson. Performance for the camera, on site at Blue Heron Orchard, Missouri, 2017. (<em>Photo:</em> Lisa Wigoda, <em>Quote above:</em> Ann Titus)<br /><br /></div><div class="t-redactor__text">I am an artist, art professor and nine-year survivor of <u style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);"><a href="https://www.cancer.org/cancer/types/breast-cancer/about/types-of-breast-cancer/triple-negative.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);">Triple-negative </a></u>breast cancer, an aggressive breast cancer subtype, positive for a mutation in the <u style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);"><a href="https://www.facingourrisk.org/hereditary-cancer-genes-and-risk/BRCA1-risks-prevention-treatment" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);">BRCA1 gene.</a></u> In 2017, when I was diagnosed both with cancer and the hereditary risk, I turned the camera on myself to document the experience, not for the ubiquitous performance-of-the-self for social media, but with a goal of creating an artistic production that would provide me with a sense of motivation to complete a project in a future <em>in which I would be alive</em>. It was also very therapeutic, like witnessing the process unfold from a slight distance while at the same time being embodied within it.</div><div class="t-redactor__text">After many months of treatment and making a few video and <u><a href="https://cheriesampson.net/every.single.one/photo-series/2018.html" style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);">photographic works in the environment of my husband’s organic apple orchard </a></u>and woodlands around our property, I finally posted an image on Facebook. A friend and cancer survivor, Illinois artist, Ann Titus, wrote the above quote upon seeing the image.</div><div class="t-redactor__text"><div style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);" data-customstyle="yes"><u style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);"><a href="https://everysingleone1.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);">“every.single.one” </a></u><span style="color: rgb(5, 5, 5);">became the title for the production, which has been eight years in the making. It is an original one-woman multi-media theatrical performance that depicts personal, familial and community stories with hereditary cancer while exploring topics of science, genetics and integrative oncology from a cancer patient’s perspective.</span></div></div><img src="https://static.tildacdn.com/tild3766-3966-4933-b961-656238356266/2024_everysingleone-.jpg"><div class="t-redactor__text"><em>"every.single.one" </em>  Cherie Sampson. Presented at Minnesota Fringe Festival, 2024. <br />(Photo: Dave Suggs)</div><div class="t-redactor__text">The performance weaves three levels of testimonial: my own, my sister’s, and those of hereditary cancer survivors and <a href="https://www.facingourrisk.org/previvor-resources" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);">"previvors" </a>(people with an inherited risk who take prophylactic measures to prevent cancer.) The documentary and other media collected during and after treatment comprise the rich audio-visual environment of the performance that, along with live and prerecorded spoken word and expressive movement, is integral to the storytelling. The performance addresses agency in dealing with adversity, navigating allopathic treatment and complimentary,<a href="https://integrativeonc.org/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);"> </a><u style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);"><a href="https://www.mayoclinic.org/tests-procedures/complementary-alternative-medicine/about/pac-20393581" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);">integrative modalities</a></u><a href="https://integrativeonc.org/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);"> </a>(that help patients cope mentally, physically and emotionally), impacts of hereditary disease and risk on individuals and families, challenging decision-making, the therapeutic power of the arts, survivorship and mortality. All these themes converge to convey that no two cancer stories are alike.</div><div class="t-redactor__text">Dance as a healing practice is an important through-line in the performance as it was during my treatment and recovery. Shortly after diagnosis, I informed Anjali-Tata Hudson, my dance mentor in the classical Indian dance form, <u style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);"><a href="https://danceinteractive.jacobspillow.org/themes-essays/what-is-dance/introduction-to-bharatanatyam/" style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);">Bharatanatyam,</a></u> that I wished to continue my instruction with her and “keep dancing through this.” Together we worked on traditional items, such as a <u style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);"><a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/Kali" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);">“Kali” </a></u>dance to embody the goddess’s “shakti” and transformative power and provide focus for physical, emotional, and spiritual strength.<br /><br /></div><img src="https://static.tildacdn.com/tild3136-6661-4536-b536-643063356230/2024_everysingleone-.jpg"><div class="t-redactor__text"><em>"every.single.one" </em> Cherie Sampson. Presented at Minnesota Fringe Festival, 2024.<br />(Photo: Dave Suggs)</div><div class="t-redactor__text">Dancing, along with my yoga practice, was grounding and got me back on my feet after each treatment cycle to exercise and regain stamina. Solitary improvisational sessions in my summer (barn)studio in which I worked through difficult experiences while undergoing treatment were fused with phrases from the traditional dances to become dance scenes co-choreographed by Anjali and me for the “every.single.one” performance.<br /><br /></div><img src="https://static.tildacdn.com/tild6434-3663-4633-b636-623931666566/Ganesh_dance.jpg"><div class="t-redactor__text"><em>"Ganesh dance"</em> 2022, Co-choreographed by Cherie Sampson &amp; Anjali Tata-Hudson for <em>"every.single.one."</em> (From video still in studio). Music by Charles Gran.<br /><br /></div><div class="t-redactor__text">“every.single.one” has been presented in theatrical readings and live performances since 2019 while it was still a work-in-process. Since 2023, it has been performed in Canada, Washington, D.C., Illinois and Missouri, with its full-production debut in early 2025 at the <a href="https://www.cectheatre.org/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);">Columbia Entertainment Company Theater (CEC),</a>a long-time community-supported theater in Columbia, Missouri.<br /><br /></div><img src="https://static.tildacdn.com/tild3264-6334-4430-b832-616437376439/DSC_6005.JPG"><div class="t-redactor__text"><em>every.single.one, </em>Columbia Entertainment Company (CEC) Theater, Columbia, MO. USA. 2025 <br />(Photo: Jonathan Meyer)</div><img src="https://static.tildacdn.com/tild3435-3336-4537-b761-396334626137/Red_Devil___me_lowe_.jpg"><div class="t-redactor__text">every.single.one, </div><div class="t-redactor__text">In 2023, it was performed for the 20th Annual Conference of the <u style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);"><a href="https://integrativeonc.org/about-us/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);">Society for Integrative Oncology (SIO) </a></u>at the Banff Center for Arts &amp; Creativity. Over the years, videos and images related to the project have been shown in <u style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);"><a href="https://smithcenter.org/galleryexhibition/every-single-one-art-cancer-transformation/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener" style="color: rgb(167, 48, 154);">solo and group art exhibitions</a></u> as well as film festivals internationally. </div><div class="t-redactor__text">I have been invited to present about the performance (and related research) at artist gallery talks, conferences and symposia related to topics ranging widely from clinical oncology to theater research to classical Indian dance – subjects for future blogs.<br /><br /></div><div class="t-redactor__text"><strong>What will this blog be about? Many things! </strong><br /><br /></div><div class="t-redactor__text"><strong><em>This blog is also about ~you~ </em></strong><br /><br />I invite anyone who has an interest and/or embodied experience in any of these topics to share that here. If you are an artist of any kind – please interpret that as you wish – and have continued a creative practice while undergoing cancer treatment, please reach out. I would love to hear your story as well.<br /><br /></div><img src="https://static.tildacdn.com/tild3232-6339-4365-b063-626136633634/Sampson_still_1.jpg"><div class="t-redactor__text">Video still from projection design in <em>every.single.one</em> show</div>]]></turbo:content>
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