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Becoming a New Yorker and Globe and Mail cartoonist in your early 20s is incredible. Getting diagnosed with chronic pain in your early 20s is pretty devastating—and limits your ability to do the very things that give you a sense of identity. Gabrielle Drolet shares the wild and painful ride of managing a debilitating illness in her warm and remarkably funny memoir Look Ma, No Hands, a book she could only write with the help of adaptive voice-to-text technology. In this delightful conversation, she tells Gill how she has grown through this challenging time; how creativity helps with making sense of uncertainty; and how facing adversity deepens our compassion. Gabrielle’s story is a bracing reminder that we always get to choose how we handle the hard things that beset us.
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Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Malt Bread MediaBecoming a New Yorker and Globe and Mail cartoonist in your early 20s is incredible. Getting diagnosed with chronic pain in your early 20s is pretty devastating—and limits your ability to do the very things that give you a sense of identity. Gabrielle Drolet shares the wild and painful ride of managing a debilitating illness in her warm and remarkably funny memoir Look Ma, No Hands, a book she could only write with the help of adaptive voice-to-text technology. In this delightful conversation, she tells Gill how she has grown through this challenging time; how creativity helps with making sense of uncertainty; and how facing adversity deepens our compassion. Gabrielle’s story is a bracing reminder that we always get to choose how we handle the hard things that beset us.
Subscribe to our newsletter for more A Love Affair with the Unknown
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.