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Sibling Revelry with Kate Hudson and Oliver Hudson

Dr. Edith Eger, Dr. Marianne Engle, and Audrey Eger Thompson

Sibling Revelry with Kate Hudson and Oliver Hudson

iHeartPodcasts

Parenting, Kids & Family, Relationships, Mental Health, Society & Culture, Health & Fitness

4.710.2K Ratings

🗓️ 31 May 2023

⏱️ 94 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Dr. Edith Eger is a Holocaust survivor, therapist, and author of multiple books including, "The Gift: 14 Lessons to Save Your Life." She joins Kate and Oliver along with her daughters, Dr. Marianne Engle and Audrey Eger Thompson. They share her incredible story, and discuss grief, trauma, and the importance of finding humor.

Transcript

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0:00.0

I am Kate Hudson and my name is Oliver Hudson. We wanted to do something that highlighted

0:10.9

our relationship and what it's like to be siblings.

0:19.2

We are a sibling revelry. No, no, sibling revelry. Don't do that with your mouth.

0:26.5

Revealing, revelry. That's good.

0:39.2

This episode, this human, that you're about to listen to is Dr. Edith Eager and her

0:46.7

daughter is specifically Edith. What an amazing conversation. What an incredible woman. This

0:52.9

is definitely in my top five episodes that we have done out of the hundred. It was very powerful

1:01.0

and incredible. She is a Holocaust survivor. She's a psychologist. She's an author. Her daughters

1:08.6

were incredible. She invited me over to E. Cougal, which I wish that I could have gone and I kind

1:15.1

of still want to go. Where is she again? She's in San Diego. She's south. I think we should take

1:22.7

her up on this because she's a fucking legend. She's incredible. She's like in her 90s and just

1:30.2

on point right there. Her daughter is Mary Ann Angle and Audrey Thompson. Yeah. And she shared with us

1:39.8

about her time in the concentration camp and how she was able to get through it and then what it

1:46.9

was like on the other side even after most of her family was gone. It's unbelievable. And then she

1:52.8

talks about sort of part of her book too is how grief and trauma can just be passed down through

1:58.1

these generations. I understand that, obviously, not capacity that she's been to her family,

2:04.1

but that shit does get passed down. We have to break the cycles. And how she's sort of found

2:11.6

humor in these horrible situations. And it was an incredible conversation. She's like famous.

2:20.0

My Bowdie was talking about her the other day because they're learning about her at school.

2:27.2

And I was like, yeah, I was like, dude, she was on my podcast. What? And then I turned on KCET,

2:33.0

which is sort of a public station here. And there's a whole documentary on her and she's talking

2:37.6

about her time in the concentration camps and how she was dancing for the angel of death.

...

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