Rebecca Miller writes about growing up in two different households. She says disability is part of this universal human experience, and it's also so singular. There are ways that every single person who is disabled has as unique of an idiosyncratic experience as any other human being alive. "I would never, and could never speak for all disabled people," she says.
Rebekah Taussig is a Kansas City writer and teacher with her doctorate in Creative Nonfiction and Disability Studies. For the last five years, she’s grown a global community on Instagram, where she crafts these “mini-memoirs” that take you into her world, experiences and identity, a part of which includes her near lifelong relationship with physical disability and the wheelchair that has given her freedom and mobility and much more. Rebekah’s memoir in essays, Sitting Pretty: The View from My Ordinary Resilient Disabled Body (https://amzn.to/3mgFNEw) takes you into her life, creating an eye-opening, funny, and insightful portrait of a body that looks and moves differently than most. In today’s conversation, we dive into all of this. I learned so much not just about Rebekah, her family, life and mindset, but also her passion for writing and creativity and people.
You can find Rebekah Taussig at:
Website : https://rebekahtaussig.com/
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