for your Cousin


for your Aunt


for your Mother


for your Daughter for your Friend


for You

MISSION

yesicame exists to reimagine intimacy during and after cancer.

I support women as they navigate the physical, emotional, and relational shifts that treatment can bring. Through personalized consultation, somatic practices, and open dialogue, my mission is to create spaces of tenderness, healing, and erotic vitality. Together, we will explore ways to meet your body where it is — and to discover new possibilities for pleasure within it.

This work is not only about sex — it is about care, connection, and reclaiming the body as a site of pleasure.

Whether you are moving through treatment, living post-cancer, or supporting someone you love, yesicame is here to guide you in finding new pathways to intimacy, confidence, and joy.

ROYA

Carreras Fereshtehnejad is a trauma-informed movement researcher, facilitator, writer, artist, and intimacy guide.

As a facilitator she works at the intersection of movement, dance, and care, with a passion for building community. She weaves years of experience as an improvisationist, caregiver, and educator. She holds an MFA from Bennington College, where her research centered on actionable ways to reorient alongside pain, pleasure, protest, and survival.

Her artistic work centers the femme experience and rigorously studies how embodied practice gestures toward the reclamation of narratives that have been silenced or indoctrinated for generations. She believes the antidote to shame lies in embodied practice, improvisation, and tenderness.

Alongside her artistic research, Roya offers consultation in intimacy during and after cancer, supporting survivors as they navigate physical, emotional, and relational shifts. Her sessions integrate somatic practices with open dialogue, creating spaces of tenderness, healing, and erotic vitality. This work is designed to name blocks and discover new pathways toward meeting pain with pleasure, while honoring each person’s unique relationship to sex and intimacy.

Roya also brings personal lived experience to this work. At the age of 35, she was diagnosed with stage 1 breast cancer and advanced ovarian cancer, leading to a total hysterectomy and double mastectomy. Throughout treatment, she developed practices that allowed her to sustain a vibrant sex life during and after cancer. Now in remission, she continues to share these embodied tools as part of her mission to reimagine intimacy after illness.

Roya is first-generation Persian and Andalusian, raised Muslim in the U.S. Coming from intersections of culture, migration, and survival, she brings a deep awareness of how identity, heritage, and lived experience shape our relationships to the body, intimacy, and care.