Carrie Bickmore is one tough mother. Literally.
In this week’s episode of Mamamia podcast No Filter, Carrie spoke with Mamamia co-founder Mia Freedman about losing her first husband Greg to brain cancer, why she had to lie to the other mothers at Mother’s group and what it was like to be pregnant and have smile through morning sickness on camera for The Project.
“I really, really struggled and for some reason it was worse in the afternoons and evenings,” she says.
“I often went to the toilet and just sat there… with my face against the cool tiles on the floor and just lay there for a second and then get back up and go back out.
“It was hard but women are doing it all over the country, so I thought, ‘I’m not down a mine feeling suffocated somewhere in the darkness, so just get a grip’.”
But it wasn’t the only experience she’s silently battled through on-camera; Bickmore bravely graced TV screens every night while privately enduring the worst fight imaginable.
In late 2010, she lost her husband, Greg – and father of their young son – to brain cancer.
Until this year, she has remained relatively tight-lipped on the personal grief that rocked her small family. But now, she’s ready to talk.
Bickmore says she didn’t want to talk about those private moments, but has realised that sharing her own experience of grief – as she did publicly when asking people to don beanies for brain cancer during her Gold Logie acceptance speech earlier this year – can help others.
Top Comments
I'd really like there to be a transcript of the podcasts. I come to this website when I'm at work, so I can't listen to anything, but I can read. I know I'm not the only one who has said this, I'd just like to add my vote to this suggestion.
It is great that she is raising such fantastic awareness about this cancer, but I have to say I wish she didn't start her own charity. There are excellent charities out there that she could support without the admin of starting a new one. We have a crazy number of charities in Australia, on average 9 start every week and for every 1 that closes, 1.5 replace it. It isn't sustainable and when people are supporting such incredibly important causes, I think it is also important that we do so in a way that is sustainable and puts the most money possible into the cause not the operations.
I agree with ypur view but I heard her in another interview say her foundation is just there to raise money and they will pass that money on to existing charities.
I disagree.
I admire Carrie for her passion what she is doing to raise awareness and money to go towards brain cancer research.
There are other charities,but none dedicated entirely to support this one cause.
With a lot of them,by the time the money filters through the system,there's not much left for the actual for cause.
Go Carrie! Well done!
It's actually not a charity it's a foundation.
Hardly any money goes towards Glioblastoma research,which is truly heartbreaking.
This is a very aggressive and lethal brain cancer for which there will NEVER be a cure!
Most of the money given toward cancer research is mostly spent on breast cancer and prostrate cancer- very disappointing,which is why I won't donate to any of them.
There are too many charities and "worthy causes" these days,which is why they aren't sustainable.Everywhere you turn someone is asking for money,and it's just reached the point of ridiculousness.
Times are tough and people just have to say no.