Julia Bradbury broke down into tears as she recalled the heartbreaking moment she informed her husband Gerard Cunningham about her cancer diagnosis.
The Countryfile presenter, 53, was diagnosed with breast cancer in September 2021 before undergoing a mastectomy to have her 6cm tumour removed.
Appearing on Davina McCall’s Begin Again podcast, Julia spoke about the moment she phoned her partner, whom she has been married to since 2000, to break the devastating news.
Julia said: ‘I told him, and we cried. And I said, “I’ll do whatever I have to do to get through this. I will do whatever it is”.’
Determined to fight, she expressed her readiness to face any challenge that may pop up ahead.
‘If I have to lose a breast, I’ll have to lose my hair. If I have to go, whatever it is I need to do,’ she said. ‘I’m going to do what I need to do to get through this’.
Julia Bradbury broke down into tears as she recalled the heartbreaking moment she informed her husband Gerard Cunningham about her cancer diagnosis
The Countryfile presenter, 53, was diagnosed with breast cancer in September 2021 before undergoing a mastectomy to have her 6cm tumour removed (pictured with husband)
The journalist underwent a mastectomy to have a 6cm tumour removed a month after publicly announcing her diagnosis in 2021 – pictured days before her mastectomy
Julia said fighting cancer is not the same for everyone. She said: ‘Every type of cancer is different. Every type of breast cancer is different.
‘You’ll have a friend who’s gone through breast cancer and she and I will sit down and have a story and we’ll have had a different tumour in a different place and it will behave differently.
‘It’s very complicated. And that’s the reason why the war on cancer hasn’t been won yet.’
Julia shares her son Zephyr, 13, and her twin girls, Xanthe and Zena, eight with her property developer husband Gerard.
In 2023, she spoke about her determination to ‘stay alive’ two years on from her breast cancer diagnosis.
The journalist and TV presenter had the tumour, two lymph glands and her left breast removed before having reconstruction surgery.
Julia has since revealed how her diagnosis changed her life, leading her to adopt a much healthier diet and go teetotal as she declares she will do everything possible to see her children grow up.
Speaking to The Times, Julia admitted guiding her three kids through her diagnosis and surgery was one of the toughest moments of the past two years.
In 2023, she spoke about her determination to ‘stay alive’ two years on from her breast cancer diagnosis
Julia shares her son Zephyr, 13, and her twin girls, Xanthe and Zena, eight with her property developer husband Gerard (pictured together in 2022)
‘When I had that first biopsy, I was like, “I want to see my children grow up. I want to live through GCSEs and A-levels and 21st birthdays and university,”‘ she explained.
‘I want to see them as adults. I just want to stay alive.’
Julia said she didn’t want to video call with her children while in hospital for her mastectomy as ‘I didn’t want them to see me like that. I thought it would be worrying for them.
‘What’s difficult with young children is explaining cancer to them without petrifying them. I was very aware that I had to be honest.’
The day she left hospital to return home Julia enlisted her sister to do her hair and makeup to help her get her ‘game face’ on to reassure her kids.
She said there have been tough moments two years on as one of her daughters recently asked her if her cancer will come back.
Julia admitted: ‘That was really hard. Cancer has shaped who I am, but it doesn’t define who I am. It profoundly changed my life and the way I think and behave.
Julia first found a lump in her breast in 2020 which proved to be a benign cluster of cysts.
She had to have another mammogram a year later and though that didn’t return anything unusual, doctors found a shadow at her follow-up appointment.
Speaking of the first signs, Julia, speaking in 2021, said: ‘About a year ago I noticed a lump in my breast. I was away on a work trip and then I came back and we went into lockdown.
‘I admit I was a little bit sloppy. It took me a month until I spoke to my GP, who I’ve known since I was 18.
‘Fast-forward a year I still had a lump, and I had something called micro cysts.
‘I was told to keep an eye on them which I did. I went for my follow mammogram which I insisted on having. I told them I had this pain that I could feel in my lump.
‘It wasn’t until the third physical examination that a doctor discovered a shadow which turned out to be a ”tiny lump”.’
Julia needed to have a mammogram right away. ‘Within minutes I was having a biopsy, that’s when I knew I was on a different path,’ she said.
‘That was the first moment I felt sadness and fear because everything just changed so quickly, but of course that’s what happens with cancer.’