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Pulling The Thread with Elise Loehnen

Whose Pain Counts? (Susan Burton)

Pulling The Thread with Elise Loehnen

Elise Loehnen

Society & Culture, Religion & Spirituality, Self-improvement, Education

4.8900 Ratings

🗓️ 2 November 2023

⏱️ 54 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

“I mean, I do think that I have an abiding interest in women's bodies. In how our bodies can be determinative, how they can suggest certain identities, how they can preclude certain identities, how our bodies can, you know, hold lots of possibilities. Like, I noticed I just said the negative parts first, I think because it took me until I was in my mid forties when I finished this book and published it, to understand the possibilities of a body, the transformative possibilities of living in and living from a body and taking pleasure in my body in a way that it's not that I had never taken pleasure in it. There were certainly things I did that gave me pleasure, but there was a lot of self loathing directed at my form. So, I think that we have a lot of stories about living in these bodies as women.” So says Susan Burton, whose voice you might recognize from the incredible New York Times and Serial podcast, The Retrievals, which explores the experience of women who underwent egg retrieval at the Yale Fertility Center with saline in lieu of fentanyl—because a nurse named Donna was replacing the drugs in service of her addiction. The series is a beautiful exploration of whose pain matters, and the type of medical gaslighting that’s far too common in the lives of women. Susan is a veteran staff member at “This American Life,” and the author of the stunning memoir, Empty, which explores her own uneasy relationship with her body. Though she’s in recovery now—a description she holds lightly—Susan spent the first few decades of her life struggling with binge eating disorder. We explore all of this in our conversation, which I’ll take you to now. MORE FROM SUSAN BURTON: Empty: A Memoir The Retrievals Podcast Susan Burton’s Website Follow Susan on Instagram To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hi, it's Elise Lunan, host of Pulling the Thread.

0:03.6

Today's guest is the brilliant Susan Burton, author of the gorgeous memoir, Empty,

0:08.9

and the host of the chart-topping New York Times podcast, The Retrievals.

0:16.9

You know what that is?

0:19.4

An ice-cold beer.

0:22.6

What's different? It's Budweiser.

0:25.6

Food longer for a refreshing, smooth taste.

0:32.6

Like no other.

0:35.6

Cheers to that.

0:36.6

Budweiser, like no other. Please to that.

0:39.3

Budweiser, like no other.

0:40.8

Please drink responsibly.

1:11.7

For the facts, visit drinkaware.coma.uker.uker. Hi, it's Elise Lunan, host of Pulling the Thread. On this show, we pull apart the web in which we all live to understand who we are and why we're here. Pulling the thread is about big questions, why we do what we do, how we can understand our own experiences within a larger spiritual and historical context, the ways in which we might begin to understand ourselves and each other

1:16.6

better, and what's required to heal ourselves and our world. I'll be joined in conversation by

1:22.4

luminaries and wise elders, those who have laid tracks in their work and lives to help us bring

1:27.2

meaning and understanding to help us bring meaning and

1:27.9

understanding to a world that often feels chaotic and overwhelming. My hope is that these

1:33.3

conversations spark moments of resonance and plant tiny seeds of awareness so that we might all

1:38.8

collectively learn and grow. I mean, I do think that I have an abiding interest in women's bodies, in how our bodies can be, you know,

1:52.6

determinative, how they can suggest certain identities, how they can preclude certain identities,

1:58.1

how our bodies can, you bodies can hold lots of possibilities.

2:02.0

Like I noticed I just said the sort of negative parts first, I think, because it took me until

...

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