STILL FOR HEALTH + WELLNESS PROFESSIONALS
Share the beautiful option of Aesthetic Flat Closure and provide hope and empowerment to your patients who are making reconstruction decisions.
My DMX was completed last September. How great it would have been to share pictures of happy, confident women, still thriving and living amazing lives—proving that quality of life is not based on the mound on your chest but the person you are within. -Still Follower
STILL IS HOPE + EMPOWERMENT
Still’s powerful message makes a meaningful difference.
Still’s resources create awareness of aesthetic flat closure as a valid reconstruction option, promote body positivity, and help normalize flat for patients, their supporters, and the public.
Still is here to make a difficult time in life a bit easier by opening doors for important conversations that can help inform decision making. Supporting that goal, seeing examples of flat closure and talking about it publicly, normalizes it.
The result? Sparing patients from added emotional, physical, and financial, physical stress that can come from not being uninformed, unsupported, and dismissed.
Bring Still to your patients, colleagues, and organization.
Designed for waiting rooms and consultation appointments, this abbreviated version of the Still Anthology, Vol. 1 is clean, hospital-suitable, and a comprehensive representation of real outcomes.
Speaking Engagements
Still's founder, Lisa Taft Sylvester, is available to speak at healthcare events, conferences, and grand rounds about her experience going flat as a BRCA2 previvor, creating Still, and the project’s impact.
The Still Anthology, Volume 1 is a powerful collection of portraits and personal narratives from individuals who chose to go flat after mastectomy.
Share these cards with patients and give them access to all Still’s resources so they can choose the option that is meaningful, inspiring, and helpful in their particular situation.
Through striking imagery and deeply honest storytelling, the book challenges conventional ideas of femininity, beauty, and wholeness—revealing lives that are not defined by loss, but by autonomy, resilience, and self-expression.
The Still Exhibition
Nevertheless, I am Still is a powerful art exhibit that can travel to your institution, bringing visibility and opening conversations around aesthetic flat closure. This exhibit challenges perceptions of beauty and shines a light on the beautiful potential that exists on the other side of choosing to go flat—despite what society has to say about it.
STILL COMPENDIUM SPOTLIGHT
Sharing Aesthetic Flat Closure in the clinical setting.
The Still Compendium is designed to make discussing aesthetic flat closure with patients easy for you, and hope giving to your patients.
Unlike medical media and screenshots from social platforms, the Still Compendium provides a comprehensive view of flat closure that’s not available elsewhere.
Stories from breast cancer patients and previvors focused on their own experiences of choosing and going flat
Representation of diverse ages, identities, and life stages
Showing what aesthetic flat closure can look like on different body types
Designed for use in a medical setting. The Still Compendium is your AFC tool that enables meaningful conversations about what it’s like to go flat and live flat. It supports the decision making process and provides insights on living life as a flattie—from real people and their real experiences.
What patients say about Still
How happy I am to have found this! I became a flattie in 2023. During this journey the only time I really remember crying was when we met with the plastic surgeon about reconstruction. The terrifying risks mixed with the extra surgeries and recovery periods were not okay with me. I wish I had something like Still for inspiration and hope. —Still Follower
We have a lot of anxious stuff going on in our world, too much to keep up on for me, and right in the midst of this, STILL shows up and offers a loving supportive knowledge base for women in their hour of need. —Erin
I had my DMX in 2024 and my friends just assumed I’d come out of it with “boobs”. I was like, why would you assume that? I’m gonna rock being a flattie! —Still Follower
My DMX was completed last September and AFC was not provided as an option. I had to advocate for myself and ask for a non- reconstructed flat closure. —Still Follower
Just wanted to tell you, I smiled so big when I saw the photos of all these glorious women. Bravo!!! —Still Follower
Still me. That’s the phrase that sits so well in my head. I am about two months away from having my surgery and the idea of having the Still Compendium is so brilliantly simple and necessary! I searched to find exactly just that.—Still Follower
I searched high and low to find (AFC) and I found it thanks to Instagram! But it should not be so hard; and the assumption of reconstruction shouldn’t be. There is enough challenge and doubt. Thank you for what you are doing. —Still Follower