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With guest Steven Lowell on How I Ally with Lucinda Koza
What happens when you stop hiding the hardest part of yourself—and start leading with it instead?
In this deeply human, candid conversation, Lucinda Koza sits down with career coach and reverse recruiter Steven Lowell, who shares how a late diagnosis of epilepsy reshaped his life. From collapsing on the job in Times Square to navigating the shame and silence that often surrounds invisible disabilities, Steven doesn’t just open up—he reframes the narrative.
This episode explores how living with epilepsy taught him to speak up, accept help, and ultimately turn what once felt like a weakness into his greatest strength.
Why invisible disabilities often go unspoken—even in families
How stress can impact neurological health in profound ways
What it’s like to have a seizure in public (and be misjudged for it)
The vital role of Steven’s wife in his journey to diagnosis and stability
How naming the hard thing can bring connection, not rejection
The power of blunt honesty in healing shame
Steven is a New York City–based reverse recruiter and career coach who’s worked across six industries and four countries. His coaching style is no-nonsense, deeply empathic, and grounded in lived experience—especially when it comes to helping others navigate their own nontraditional paths.
Learn more about Steven’s reverse recruiting work
Epilepsy Foundation: epilepsy.com
👉 Subscribe to How I Ally for honest, hopeful conversations about disability, identity, and resilience.
⭐️ If this episode moved you, please leave a rating or review—it really helps!
5
22 ratings
With guest Steven Lowell on How I Ally with Lucinda Koza
What happens when you stop hiding the hardest part of yourself—and start leading with it instead?
In this deeply human, candid conversation, Lucinda Koza sits down with career coach and reverse recruiter Steven Lowell, who shares how a late diagnosis of epilepsy reshaped his life. From collapsing on the job in Times Square to navigating the shame and silence that often surrounds invisible disabilities, Steven doesn’t just open up—he reframes the narrative.
This episode explores how living with epilepsy taught him to speak up, accept help, and ultimately turn what once felt like a weakness into his greatest strength.
Why invisible disabilities often go unspoken—even in families
How stress can impact neurological health in profound ways
What it’s like to have a seizure in public (and be misjudged for it)
The vital role of Steven’s wife in his journey to diagnosis and stability
How naming the hard thing can bring connection, not rejection
The power of blunt honesty in healing shame
Steven is a New York City–based reverse recruiter and career coach who’s worked across six industries and four countries. His coaching style is no-nonsense, deeply empathic, and grounded in lived experience—especially when it comes to helping others navigate their own nontraditional paths.
Learn more about Steven’s reverse recruiting work
Epilepsy Foundation: epilepsy.com
👉 Subscribe to How I Ally for honest, hopeful conversations about disability, identity, and resilience.
⭐️ If this episode moved you, please leave a rating or review—it really helps!