Andrea Dunlop
š¤ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
But please rest assured, we will have a knowledgeable lawyer on here to discuss the legal complexities of this case because they are legion. If you have specific questions or comments about this case or want to share your own experiences with POTS and EDS, as a number of you have done, please do so.
The very best way to make sure we get this feedback is to send us an email or voice memo to hello at nobody should believe me dot com. But we also monitor comments on Spotify and socials if you want to leave them there. Thank you so much for listening and for being so engaged with this show. I could not keep making it without you. Now, here's my conversation with the wonderful Dr. Mary Sanders.
The very best way to make sure we get this feedback is to send us an email or voice memo to hello at nobody should believe me dot com. But we also monitor comments on Spotify and socials if you want to leave them there. Thank you so much for listening and for being so engaged with this show. I could not keep making it without you. Now, here's my conversation with the wonderful Dr. Mary Sanders.
The very best way to make sure we get this feedback is to send us an email or voice memo to hello at nobody should believe me dot com. But we also monitor comments on Spotify and socials if you want to leave them there. Thank you so much for listening and for being so engaged with this show. I could not keep making it without you. Now, here's my conversation with the wonderful Dr. Mary Sanders.
Hi, Mary. Hi, how are you? I'm good. Thank you so much for being with us yet again. You are a frequent contributor to Nobody Should Believe Me, a friend of the show, I would say. For those listeners who have not met you before, can you tell us who you are and what you do, how you come to this work? Sure.
Hi, Mary. Hi, how are you? I'm good. Thank you so much for being with us yet again. You are a frequent contributor to Nobody Should Believe Me, a friend of the show, I would say. For those listeners who have not met you before, can you tell us who you are and what you do, how you come to this work? Sure.
Hi, Mary. Hi, how are you? I'm good. Thank you so much for being with us yet again. You are a frequent contributor to Nobody Should Believe Me, a friend of the show, I would say. For those listeners who have not met you before, can you tell us who you are and what you do, how you come to this work? Sure.
Well, you are an incredible thinker, writer, speaker on this topic, and you are just a personal mentor of mine. So I always love having you on the show. Thank you.
Well, you are an incredible thinker, writer, speaker on this topic, and you are just a personal mentor of mine. So I always love having you on the show. Thank you.
Well, you are an incredible thinker, writer, speaker on this topic, and you are just a personal mentor of mine. So I always love having you on the show. Thank you.
Oh, Mary, you're going to give me all teary right at the top of our conversation. Just a little love fest to start us off. It was nice.
Oh, Mary, you're going to give me all teary right at the top of our conversation. Just a little love fest to start us off. It was nice.
Oh, Mary, you're going to give me all teary right at the top of our conversation. Just a little love fest to start us off. It was nice.
You know, and it's so interesting when you talk about your, you know, the duration of your career and how long you've been in this field and mentioning that 1974 was the beginning of mandatory reporting laws, because I think something that's very
You know, and it's so interesting when you talk about your, you know, the duration of your career and how long you've been in this field and mentioning that 1974 was the beginning of mandatory reporting laws, because I think something that's very
You know, and it's so interesting when you talk about your, you know, the duration of your career and how long you've been in this field and mentioning that 1974 was the beginning of mandatory reporting laws, because I think something that's very
easy for people to lose sight of especially if they are an elder millennial like i am or younger is that these concepts of child abuse being a thing that should be against the law that should be uh protected against in a formal way are very new um and hence i think very fragile. We are only sort of one generation into these being very accepted concepts.
easy for people to lose sight of especially if they are an elder millennial like i am or younger is that these concepts of child abuse being a thing that should be against the law that should be uh protected against in a formal way are very new um and hence i think very fragile. We are only sort of one generation into these being very accepted concepts.
easy for people to lose sight of especially if they are an elder millennial like i am or younger is that these concepts of child abuse being a thing that should be against the law that should be uh protected against in a formal way are very new um and hence i think very fragile. We are only sort of one generation into these being very accepted concepts.
And so even though I grew up with this as the norm, you know, people your age and my parents' age did not. And so I think that's something really important for people to keep in mind as we talk about legal challenges to these protections, which is what we were talking about today.