
arah Herrington’s cancer diagnosis arrived with a vocabulary she never asked for. Words like “biopsy” and “prognosis” took up space in her world but offered nothing to hold onto. They described something enormous and still felt completely blank.
So she found her way to poetry.
Oprah Daily published Herrington’s story, spotlighting how three poets quietly carried her through one of the hardest chapters of her life. Emily Dickinson, Audre Lorde, and Andrea Gibson each gave her what clinical language couldn’t. Oprah Daily’s piece describes what those poems gave her: space, meaning, and connection.
It’s a feeling a lot of people will recognize.
Getting a serious diagnosis is a strange kind of language problem. The medical world has words for everything. They’re precise and necessary, but they don’t quite reach the emotional core of what’s happening to you. You can know every fact in your pathology report and still feel completely without words. Reaching for poetry in that moment makes a lot of sense.
Emily Dickinson, the 19th-century American poet, wrote about death and loss with an intimacy that still feels startling. Her poems sit with the dark rather than rushing past it. For someone trying to make sense of a diagnosis, that kind of company is genuinely comforting.
Audre Lorde brings something different. Lorde died in 1992. She wrote directly about her own cancer experience in “The Cancer Journals,” a book that refused to make illness tidy or inspirational. Her honesty hits hard. For Herrington, Lorde may have offered something rare: proof that someone else had already found the words.
Andrea Gibson is a contemporary spoken word poet known for personal work about illness, love, and survival. Gibson has spoken publicly about facing serious health challenges. Their poems carry a rawness that feels more like a letter than a performance. That closeness can be exactly what you reach for in a moment that feels isolating.
Herrington’s story captures something people rarely say out loud. Literature can be genuine support during illness. Not a metaphor for support. Real, practical comfort for a mind trying to navigate something terrifying.
Oprah Daily has long been a home for wellness stories centered on real people’s experiences. This piece fits that mission beautifully. And Herrington’s willingness to name the specific poets that kept her company is a gift to anyone who might need the same lifeline right now.
No poem cures cancer. But sitting with Dickinson’s lines or a page of Lorde in the middle of a hard week can make the unbearable feel a little less alone. Herrington found that and shared it. That’s worth a lot.
You can view the original article HERE.









