TELUS Talks with Tamara Taggart
Society & Culture
What started as a casual effort to increase disability awareness turned into a social media following of almost 100,000. Ashley Harris Whaley launched her ‘Disability Reframed’ Instagram account in 2020, and as her following grew, she also published her first children’s book, I Am, You Are, to help children and adults have meaningful discussions about disability and ableism. Ashley discusses her grassroots activism, the importance of representation and her experience parenting with a disability.
Fighting forest fires with good fire: Dr. Amy Cardinal Christianson
How to be a stronger leader: Dr. Diane McIntosh
How to face fatphobia: Kate Manne
Dads, it’s okay to not be okay: Dr. Benjamin Rosen and Dr. Andrew Howlett
Why athletes struggle with mental health: Stephanie Labbé
Books are the secret to building empathy: Tasha Spillett
Race and masculinity in the classroom: Matthew R. Morris
The cancer we’re not talking about: Dr. Aline Talhouk
Breaking down schizophrenia stigma: Dr. Diane McIntosh
How loss can open new spaces to lead: Helen Knott
Men are speaking up about mental health: Dr. John Ogrodniczuk
Thinking beyond a cure for chronic pain: Kara Stanley and Simon Paradis
We need to talk about periods: Dr. Jen Gunter
How to feel less lonely: Dr. Diane McIntosh
Voice technology will change everything: Tobias Dengel
Using art to uplift others: Mark Stoddart
The legacy of Canada’s fastest family: Valerie Jerome
A journey through love, family and addiction: Kathy Wagner
What it’s like to be a newcomer to Canada: Anila Lee Yuen
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