The photo that saved a young lawyer’s life after doctors put the lump in her throat down to ‘anxiety’ for years
- Woman explains thyroid cancer diagnosis at 25
- Ashleigh Mills said it just felt like ‘a lump in her throat’
- Friends begged her to go to a doctor once it was visible
Ashleigh Mills was living a happy and healthy life before she was diagnosed with cancer at just 25.
And a lump on her throat, which was spotted by a friend during a girls’ weekend away, turned out to be the most important clue.
The lump was visible from the outside for the first time that weekend – prompting her friend to encourage her to get it checked out.
But Ashleigh, now 33, was reluctant.
She had felt the lump growing in her throat for years, but doctors had always dismissed it as ‘anxiety’. She was also at a good point in her life – she had moved out of home, graduated and secured her first job as a lawyer.

Ashleigh Mills was just 25 when she was diagnosed with thyroid cancer – after a friend noticed a lump on her throat on a girls’ weekend away (above)
Ashleigh admitted that despite knowing what anxiety felt like she trusted the doctors, which is why she initially told her friend the lump was nothing serious.
Speaking to 9Honey Ashleigh, who now works closely with the Australian Cancer Research Foundation, said she tried to dismiss her concerned friend.
‘I was so quick to be like “no, it’s nothing. I’ve already checked out, don’t worry about it”,’ she said.
But her friend didn’t give up and begged her to see another doctor.
Ashleigh decided to get it checked by a different GP the next day. A decision that potentially saved her life.
The GP did tests and within a week she was diagnosed with thyroid cancer.

Ashleigh was celebrating moving out of home, finishing university and getting a job as a lawyer so tried to dismiss her friend
Weeks later, Ashleigh had surgery to have it removed before going on a course of gruelling radioactive iodine treatments in a bid to kill the cancer.
This meant her time ‘living out of home’ was short. She had to quit her new job as a lawyer and move back in with her parents.
And for once she had no control.
‘When I was at school, or uni, or work, or I was in a particular sport, I could just try harder and work harder at whatever it was to get a result. But I couldn’t just work hard or study hard at not having cancer,’ she said.
Ashleigh needed something to distract her, so she started researching the thyroid and fundraising for cancer research.

But she is alive now because she did go to the doctor – and was diagnosed with cancer
She planned a dinner inbetween her treatments, just so she had something to focus on.
In hindsight she admits she probably put too much pressure on herself by organising the fundraiser which raised $26,000. But it has led to a continued relationship with the cancer research body and given Ashleigh the opportunity to warn others to look for the signs.
She is now raising money for the Australian Cancer Research Foundation’s inaugural Fit40 in Feb challenge – exercising for 40 minutes each day in February to raise vital funds for cancer research.
You can help her with her fundraising efforts here.
