About the author
Susan Wadia-Ells is a long-time cultural change agent. During the 1970's she organized women at Polaroid, creating the first affirmative action program for women within a Fortune 200 corporation, and soon became Polaroid's corporate affirmative action manager and a mentor to other corporate women's groups fighting for equal pay, training, benefits, and career opportunities.
After returning to academia in the early 1980's for a graduate degree in energy economics and political development at The Fletcher School, Dr. Wadia-Ells worked with community development groups in Zimbabwe as that nation's long struggle against apartheid ended. Next, she worked as a small town journalist in Brattleboro VT, under the guidance of the legendary UPI International Editor, Norman Runnion. Wadia-Ells then moved on to complete her PhD in women's studies, before teaching over the next decade in Lesley University's Adult Baccalaureate Program in Boston—helping women learn to fearlessly write their unspoken ideas and life stories. During this time, while raising her son, she also created national feminist conferences on once-ignored or banned topics including: the landmark Women's Ways of Knowing Study; exploring the personal growth dimensions within motherhood, and understanding the power of women's menopausal years.
Her 1995 anthology, The Adoption Reader: Birth Mothers, Adoptive Mothers and Adopted Daughters Tell Their Stories (Seal Press, Seattle), helped define adoption as primarily a woman's issue. Wadia-Ells' column, "Honest Health," published by the Gloucester Daily Times (MA), beginning in 2008, her long-time Busting Breast Cancer blog, and her 2013 e-book, Birth Control Drugs and Breast Cancer: Learn the Terrible Truth, all served to introduce many of the topics discussed in her 2021 book, Busting Breast Cancer: Five Simple Steps to Keep Breast Cancer Out of Your Body, based on the new metabolic theory of cancer. She currently lives in Manchester by the Sea, MA.