4.8 • 2.2K Ratings
🗓️ 30 January 2022
⏱️ 21 minutes
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0:00.0 | I want to tell you about the podcast, nobody should believe me. It is a groundbreaking investigation |
0:06.4 | into Munchausen by proxy, and it's told through the lens of family members, survivors, experts, |
0:12.4 | and even a perpetrator. I'm going to have the host and executive producer of the show, Andrea |
0:17.2 | Dunlap, on as an interview guest early in 2023. She brings a deeply personal angle to the subject, |
0:25.2 | because her own family was torn apart when her sister was investigated for Munchausen's |
0:31.2 | by proxy more than a decade ago. As highly sensitive people were often drawn to true crime, |
0:36.7 | not for the dark details, but for the resiliency. And when we see resiliency in others, |
0:43.0 | this show is ultimately hopeful. It gives us permission to lean into our own resiliency in the |
0:49.5 | things that we need to practice resiliency for in this sometimes hard and tough life. I invite |
0:56.0 | you to binge all eight episodes of Nobody Should Believe Me Season 1, wherever you listen to podcasts. |
1:26.1 | So if you're a long time listener of the show, you probably know that I am passionate about learning |
1:41.7 | from difference. It's part of what I find upsetting about the modern era we're in, |
1:46.9 | that shutting down discussions around difference instead of leaning in and learning from our differences |
1:53.0 | is so popular right now. I think it limits us as a people and as individuals. |
1:59.2 | I've really sat with myself to look at what I experienced as a child that has set me up to invite |
2:05.9 | and feel intrigued by difference. I've even felt honored to be able to experience difference. |
2:13.2 | My grandmother's had a lot to do with this. My most impactful grandmother's, because I also had a |
2:20.1 | step grandmother, my most impactful grandmother's were Grammy and Jet. That was a nickname that I'm |
2:26.5 | going to use for her. Their differences were comical. They were so huge and I compared and contrasted |
2:35.7 | and worked my little kid brain on how the differences could even be possible. You know how I say a |
2:42.8 | lot that most things aren't black and white, all are nothing and most things kind of shake out |
2:49.5 | somewhere in the middle. Well, not my experience of my grandmother's. It couldn't have been more |
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