Tracy DiNunzio
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Anything could happen from here. sat up I just went from laying down to crawling everywhere and they were like we think she's gonna be okay but she's weird she doesn't do things in order which ended up being my whole life and so yeah so I grew up spending a lot of time in hospitals and doctor's offices I had
Anything could happen from here. sat up I just went from laying down to crawling everywhere and they were like we think she's gonna be okay but she's weird she doesn't do things in order which ended up being my whole life and so yeah so I grew up spending a lot of time in hospitals and doctor's offices I had
more surgeries than I can count to address all kinds of different problems that happen from spina bifida, mostly related to my legs and feet and just trying to preserve my ability to walk. I had spinal surgeries that were very risky and complicated to try and alleviate nerve issues in my
more surgeries than I can count to address all kinds of different problems that happen from spina bifida, mostly related to my legs and feet and just trying to preserve my ability to walk. I had spinal surgeries that were very risky and complicated to try and alleviate nerve issues in my
more surgeries than I can count to address all kinds of different problems that happen from spina bifida, mostly related to my legs and feet and just trying to preserve my ability to walk. I had spinal surgeries that were very risky and complicated to try and alleviate nerve issues in my
bladder and my hips and so my life as a kid was like going between phases of being normal and then going back into a hospital phase where we wouldn't know if I was going to come out of the next surgery able to walk and there'd be a lot of like pain and difficulty and big risks and just like trauma right and people talk a lot about trauma now and I've known my whole life that I had
bladder and my hips and so my life as a kid was like going between phases of being normal and then going back into a hospital phase where we wouldn't know if I was going to come out of the next surgery able to walk and there'd be a lot of like pain and difficulty and big risks and just like trauma right and people talk a lot about trauma now and I've known my whole life that I had
bladder and my hips and so my life as a kid was like going between phases of being normal and then going back into a hospital phase where we wouldn't know if I was going to come out of the next surgery able to walk and there'd be a lot of like pain and difficulty and big risks and just like trauma right and people talk a lot about trauma now and I've known my whole life that I had
A lot of childhood trauma. So I've been working on it for a long time. And yeah, and then I still have to do a lot like medically to stay walking. And I have a lot of kind of chronic pain and areas of weakness that I have to manage.
A lot of childhood trauma. So I've been working on it for a long time. And yeah, and then I still have to do a lot like medically to stay walking. And I have a lot of kind of chronic pain and areas of weakness that I have to manage.
A lot of childhood trauma. So I've been working on it for a long time. And yeah, and then I still have to do a lot like medically to stay walking. And I have a lot of kind of chronic pain and areas of weakness that I have to manage.
so when i think about building my business that was my second job my first job has always been like managing the body i was born in and when people asked me about being a ceo i didn't used to talk about this but what i always wanted to say was like it's easy you should see my first job my second job is really easy compared to my first job but really both jobs not that easy
so when i think about building my business that was my second job my first job has always been like managing the body i was born in and when people asked me about being a ceo i didn't used to talk about this but what i always wanted to say was like it's easy you should see my first job my second job is really easy compared to my first job but really both jobs not that easy
so when i think about building my business that was my second job my first job has always been like managing the body i was born in and when people asked me about being a ceo i didn't used to talk about this but what i always wanted to say was like it's easy you should see my first job my second job is really easy compared to my first job but really both jobs not that easy
So that's the other things happened. Like I went to summer camp and I had a first love and I had a lot of the normal milestones in life. And I was like a big partier as a teenager because I had to let all that energy out. But I did deal with a lot of medical challenges.
So that's the other things happened. Like I went to summer camp and I had a first love and I had a lot of the normal milestones in life. And I was like a big partier as a teenager because I had to let all that energy out. But I did deal with a lot of medical challenges.
So that's the other things happened. Like I went to summer camp and I had a first love and I had a lot of the normal milestones in life. And I was like a big partier as a teenager because I had to let all that energy out. But I did deal with a lot of medical challenges.
Yeah, the prognosis isn't, well, it's getting better. So before I was born, historically, most people born with spina bifida did not live into adulthood. And if they did, they were often institutionalized, lived limited lives, not necessarily because of their limitations, also because society didn't really make accommodations for people with disabilities back then. So it was a pretty, you know,
Yeah, the prognosis isn't, well, it's getting better. So before I was born, historically, most people born with spina bifida did not live into adulthood. And if they did, they were often institutionalized, lived limited lives, not necessarily because of their limitations, also because society didn't really make accommodations for people with disabilities back then. So it was a pretty, you know,
Yeah, the prognosis isn't, well, it's getting better. So before I was born, historically, most people born with spina bifida did not live into adulthood. And if they did, they were often institutionalized, lived limited lives, not necessarily because of their limitations, also because society didn't really make accommodations for people with disabilities back then. So it was a pretty, you know,