
Ep. 29: Navigating Chronic Illness - Martha Grover
03/14/18 • 39 min
Body and Chronic Illness
Martha Grover is an author, poet, artist and writing coach living in Portland, Oregon. She is the author of One More for the People (Perfect Day Publishing) and The End of My Career (Perfect Day Publishing). The End of My Career was a finalist for the Oregon Book Awards in creative nonfiction in 2017. Martha is currently at work on a book of prose poems and essays about Catastrophe, Myth, and being a sick person in the 21st century. When she is not writing, Martha is making zines, coaching her writing clients, making art, and selling Real Estate.
Today we talk about her experience with Cushing’s syndrome and Addison’s disease and what it’s like to live in a body that is chronically ill.
“Some people with disabilities use a spoon to hide, to pass as able-bodied, that requires energy, to hide your disability when you aren’t in a safe space. “
- Martha Grover
This Week on the Every Body Podcast:
- How Martha discovered her acute illness
- The social and personal stories and pressures that resulted in her rapid weight gain and loss from her illness.
- Her journey from Cushing Syndrome to Addison’s Disease
- Life with a chronic illness including work, medication, dating
- How Martha has healed and found peace with her body
- Info about Spoon Theory (spoonies)
- Subscribe: https://www.patreon.com/marthagrover
- Website: somnambulistzine.com
- Coaching: http://somnambulistzine.com/shop/creative-counsel
Rate & Share
Thank you for joining me this week on the Every Body podcast. If you enjoyed this week’s episode, head over to iTunes , subscribe to the show and leave a review to help us grow the podcast. Don’t forget to visit our website , follow us on Facebook , Twitter, and Instagram , and share your story because this podcast is for every body.
Body and Chronic Illness
Martha Grover is an author, poet, artist and writing coach living in Portland, Oregon. She is the author of One More for the People (Perfect Day Publishing) and The End of My Career (Perfect Day Publishing). The End of My Career was a finalist for the Oregon Book Awards in creative nonfiction in 2017. Martha is currently at work on a book of prose poems and essays about Catastrophe, Myth, and being a sick person in the 21st century. When she is not writing, Martha is making zines, coaching her writing clients, making art, and selling Real Estate.
Today we talk about her experience with Cushing’s syndrome and Addison’s disease and what it’s like to live in a body that is chronically ill.
“Some people with disabilities use a spoon to hide, to pass as able-bodied, that requires energy, to hide your disability when you aren’t in a safe space. “
- Martha Grover
This Week on the Every Body Podcast:
- How Martha discovered her acute illness
- The social and personal stories and pressures that resulted in her rapid weight gain and loss from her illness.
- Her journey from Cushing Syndrome to Addison’s Disease
- Life with a chronic illness including work, medication, dating
- How Martha has healed and found peace with her body
- Info about Spoon Theory (spoonies)
- Subscribe: https://www.patreon.com/marthagrover
- Website: somnambulistzine.com
- Coaching: http://somnambulistzine.com/shop/creative-counsel
Rate & Share
Thank you for joining me this week on the Every Body podcast. If you enjoyed this week’s episode, head over to iTunes , subscribe to the show and leave a review to help us grow the podcast. Don’t forget to visit our website , follow us on Facebook , Twitter, and Instagram , and share your story because this podcast is for every body.
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Ep. 28: Great Awakening of Heart and Spirit - Shilo George
Shilo George is Southern Cheyenne-Arapaho and Scottish international speaker, trainer, and owner of Łush Kumtux Tumtum Consulting, which means “a great awakening of the heart and spirit” in the Chinuk Wawa trade language. She has lived her life in a body that transgresses and violates Western standards of beauty, size, sexuality, and health. Shilo interweaves cultural traditions and spirituality with an anti-oppressive and decolonizing lenses to promote healing and empowerment in herself and others in the communities she is a part of. Her workshops and presentations explore the intersections of race, sexuality, body size, and trauma (both individual and inter-generational). Shilo trains others on systems of oppression, trauma informed care, and proactive ways that businesses and organizations can create policies and environments that that promote diversity, equity, and healing.
Shilo received her Bachelor of Science in Art Practices in 2012 and a Masters of Science in Educational Leadership and Policy with a specialization in Postsecondary Adult and Continuing Education in 2017, both from Portland State University. She was named Higher Education Student of the Year by the Oregon Indian Education Association in 2013 and in 2015 was honored with the Queer Indigenous Scholar Activist & Alumni Award by the Indigenous Nations Studies Department at Portland State University. In addition to her consulting business, Shilo works as a Parent Advocate at the Native American Youth and Family Center and is an Affiliated Adjunct Instructor of the Indigenous Nations Studies at Portland State University. She can be contacted at [email protected].
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