ABSTRACT
The purpose of this qualitative study was to explore the experiences and occupational lives of Icelandic women with breast cancer. In all 18 women were interviewed using the Occupational Performance History Interview as a guide. The women employed different modes of interpreting and responding to the cancer event with occupational participation being the central vehicle to resist the illness. Adjustment to breast cancer survivorship was characterized by permanent changes in the women's lives with both positive and negative consequences. When working with women with breast cancer, occupational therapists should focus on their needs as occupational beings.