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Belinda Kate Lucas is a humanitarian devoted to awakening human potential and empowering the world to rise beyond limitation.
There are multiple ways to exist in this world and I believe people should be made aware of.
Our mission here is more than information, it is activation.

Born in the inner city of Melbourne, Australia, Belinda spent more than 30 years building her life in the place she called home. But when she found herself trapped—unknowingly—in a domestic violence relationship, she made the courageous decision to leave the state with her children and begin again in New South Wales.
Her journey through hardship, resilience, and renewal forms the foundation of her life’s purpose today.
Belinda grew up in a strong, stoic family shaped by service and sacrifice. Her grandfather served in the Australian Army from 1939 to 1948, and after his passing in 1989, her grandmother lived as a war widow for more than 40 years. These experiences surrounded Belinda with deep lessons on endurance, duty, and the silent battles carried across generations.
Drawing from this legacy, Belinda spent several years working at the Department of Veterans’ Affairs, where she supported veterans and war widows by granting pensions and Gold Cards and assessing service-related injuries.
Through this work, she witnessed firsthand the lasting impact of physical and emotional wounds—not only on those who served, but on their families and communities.

These lived experiences—survival, compassion, service, and the intergenerational effects of trauma—shaped Belinda into a humanitarian dedicated to helping others reclaim their power. Her mission is to support people in breaking free from limitation, pain, and the unseen barriers that hold them back.

In late 2014, Belinda met the father of her children, a veteran who had served in the Australian Army, including overseas deployment. Their relationship grew over the course of a decade—filled with moments of deep love, growth, and shared joy, as well as the challenges that naturally arise from a life touched by service-related trauma.
By early 2024, Belinda had stepped into the role of primary carer for her partner connected to his military experiences. It was an intense and emotionally demanding period, marked by constant vigilance, compassion, and the weight of responsibility.
Around seven months later, through education, support, and self-reflection, Belinda came to understand that she had been living within an emotionally abusive relationship—something that often develops gradually, quietly, and without clear recognition until the signs become impossible to ignore.
This realisation became a turning point in her life. It was the moment she chose safety, truth, and a new path forward for herself and her children.

In February 2025, shortly after arriving in New South Wales, Belinda received a diagnosis of triple negative breast cancer. It was a moment that changed the direction of her life, yet she chose to meet it with strength, clarity, and determination.
Throughout chemotherapy, Belinda continued to maintain her gym routine whenever her body allowed, while raising her two children on her own.

To her, this resilience became a personal testament to her mindset, her inner discipline, and the lifestyle practices she leaned on throughout her journey. She found comfort and confidence in the routines, supports, and products she chose for herself—tools that helped her stay grounded during an extremely challenging time.
For Belinda, her
To her, this resilience became a personal testament to her mindset, her inner discipline, and the lifestyle practices she leaned on throughout her journey. She found comfort and confidence in the routines, supports, and products she chose for herself—tools that helped her stay grounded during an extremely challenging time.
For Belinda, her diagnosis became less of an identity and more of a wake-up call—an invitation to reflect deeply on how she had been living. She made a conscious choice not to “attach” herself to the diagnosis emotionally. Instead, she focused on what the experience was teaching her.

Before her diagnosis, years of stress and survival-mode living had taken a toll. She had been prioritising others, pushing herself beyond exhaustion, and neglecting her own rest and nourishment. She recognised that her eating habits weren’t supporting her body, and this realisation motivated her to create healthier patterns and reconnect
Before her diagnosis, years of stress and survival-mode living had taken a toll. She had been prioritising others, pushing herself beyond exhaustion, and neglecting her own rest and nourishment. She recognised that her eating habits weren’t supporting her body, and this realisation motivated her to create healthier patterns and reconnect with her physical and emotional needs.
After 6 months of Chemotherapy, surgery and 15 days of radiation, Belinda's cancer prevailed. One single cell was not eradicated during chemotherapy which spread to her lungs, bones and lymph nodes.
As upsetting as the diagnosis was, the war was not over, so she kept positive with her diagnosis.

As she moved through treatment taking chemo tablets, Belinda began exploring the role that lifestyle, stress, nutrition, environment, and emotional health can play in overall wellbeing.
These insights became part of her personal healing journey—not medical conclusions, but reflections that helped her take back a sense of control and empow
As she moved through treatment taking chemo tablets, Belinda began exploring the role that lifestyle, stress, nutrition, environment, and emotional health can play in overall wellbeing.
These insights became part of her personal healing journey—not medical conclusions, but reflections that helped her take back a sense of control and empowerment.
Belinda believes that what we consume—through our bodies, minds, ears, and eyes—shapes our internal landscape. Her diagnosis pushed her to learn more, to listen to her intuition, and to honour her body in ways she had long postponed.
6 weeks post taking chemotherapy tablets and introducing alternative lifestyle changes, her stage 4 cancer diagnosis has decreased 30-50%.
I live in the Northern Rivers of New South Wales, Australia
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