Andrea Dunlop
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
the challenge we have in our family with Munchausen's and also to help complement my daughter on the wonderful work she's done in bringing this very difficult subject matter to a wider audience with the objective of helping people who have suffered from this and revealing some of the difficulties we went through as a family And it's very difficult to discuss, and I'd much prefer not to do it.
the challenge we have in our family with Munchausen's and also to help complement my daughter on the wonderful work she's done in bringing this very difficult subject matter to a wider audience with the objective of helping people who have suffered from this and revealing some of the difficulties we went through as a family And it's very difficult to discuss, and I'd much prefer not to do it.
But the value of doing it, I think, to explain to other parents who can see signs of this happening at an early age will, I think, make a big difference.
But the value of doing it, I think, to explain to other parents who can see signs of this happening at an early age will, I think, make a big difference.
But the value of doing it, I think, to explain to other parents who can see signs of this happening at an early age will, I think, make a big difference.
Aw, Dad. Season 5 brought me back to my sister's case, because, if you don't know, she was a part of Sophie Hartman's legal team, so Megan plays a role in this story. But I also wanted to explore the parallels between the two families, the Hartmans and the Dunlops, and the divergence, ultimately, in our two paths. Both were upper-middle-class families who grew up in idyllic suburban settings.
Aw, Dad. Season 5 brought me back to my sister's case, because, if you don't know, she was a part of Sophie Hartman's legal team, so Megan plays a role in this story. But I also wanted to explore the parallels between the two families, the Hartmans and the Dunlops, and the divergence, ultimately, in our two paths. Both were upper-middle-class families who grew up in idyllic suburban settings.
Aw, Dad. Season 5 brought me back to my sister's case, because, if you don't know, she was a part of Sophie Hartman's legal team, so Megan plays a role in this story. But I also wanted to explore the parallels between the two families, the Hartmans and the Dunlops, and the divergence, ultimately, in our two paths. Both were upper-middle-class families who grew up in idyllic suburban settings.
Megan and Sophie were both gifted children of long-married parents, given every material advantage one could hope for in this world, and yet somehow managed to portray themselves as constant victims.
Megan and Sophie were both gifted children of long-married parents, given every material advantage one could hope for in this world, and yet somehow managed to portray themselves as constant victims.
Megan and Sophie were both gifted children of long-married parents, given every material advantage one could hope for in this world, and yet somehow managed to portray themselves as constant victims.
I've always been close with my parents, and I've always admired how they handled the situation with Megan, but it's only as I've encountered all of these other stories, Sophie's in particular, that I've really understood their emotional courage. My parents and I have talked about what happened with Megan in depth many times over the years.
I've always been close with my parents, and I've always admired how they handled the situation with Megan, but it's only as I've encountered all of these other stories, Sophie's in particular, that I've really understood their emotional courage. My parents and I have talked about what happened with Megan in depth many times over the years.
I've always been close with my parents, and I've always admired how they handled the situation with Megan, but it's only as I've encountered all of these other stories, Sophie's in particular, that I've really understood their emotional courage. My parents and I have talked about what happened with Megan in depth many times over the years.
But this is the first time either of them have ever talked about my sister publicly. My dad is, in all ways, a big man. He's a successful entrepreneur and a 6'3 former rugby player. And in case you can't tell, he's British. And if you think he gets a lot of mileage out of that accent, you'd be right. He's an indefatigable optimist and irrepressibly outgoing. He collects friends everywhere he goes.
But this is the first time either of them have ever talked about my sister publicly. My dad is, in all ways, a big man. He's a successful entrepreneur and a 6'3 former rugby player. And in case you can't tell, he's British. And if you think he gets a lot of mileage out of that accent, you'd be right. He's an indefatigable optimist and irrepressibly outgoing. He collects friends everywhere he goes.
But this is the first time either of them have ever talked about my sister publicly. My dad is, in all ways, a big man. He's a successful entrepreneur and a 6'3 former rugby player. And in case you can't tell, he's British. And if you think he gets a lot of mileage out of that accent, you'd be right. He's an indefatigable optimist and irrepressibly outgoing. He collects friends everywhere he goes.
Airplanes, restaurants, his UPS delivery guy. My dad is chatting them up. But even though my dad loves to talk, now you know where I get it, I didn't think he'd ever want to talk about this. Through the years, especially as I've become a parent myself, I've come to a deeper appreciation of what it must have cost my parents to accept who my sister is.
Airplanes, restaurants, his UPS delivery guy. My dad is chatting them up. But even though my dad loves to talk, now you know where I get it, I didn't think he'd ever want to talk about this. Through the years, especially as I've become a parent myself, I've come to a deeper appreciation of what it must have cost my parents to accept who my sister is.
Airplanes, restaurants, his UPS delivery guy. My dad is chatting them up. But even though my dad loves to talk, now you know where I get it, I didn't think he'd ever want to talk about this. Through the years, especially as I've become a parent myself, I've come to a deeper appreciation of what it must have cost my parents to accept who my sister is.