Kate Bowler has always worked extremely hard. As the daughter of two academics growing up in Canada, she preferred books to sports, and liked talking and thinking about the nuances of her faith. “I never really thought about my body very much in time and space,” Kate told Anna.
But while starting her career as an academic, Kate’s relationship with her body changed. She was diagnosed with a joint laxity disorder in her 20s. And at 35, not long after having her son, Kate was diagnosed with stage IV cancer, changing her relationship to productivity and rest once again, which she also chronicled in her New York Times best selling memoir, Everything Happens For A Reason (And Other Lies I’ve Loved). Kate tells Anna about the shame of not living up to her own expectations, learning to let go, and what brings her joy.
Conversations with My Dead Mother
I Wanted To Be A 'Good Girl'
India Walton: I Knew It Was Gonna Be Tough, But I Didn't Expect it to Get Nasty
Inside John Waters' Home (But Not Inside His Colon)
How Clothes Help Us Find Our People and Ourselves
Lucinda Williams Says Whatever the Hell She Wants
Big Freedia Bounces Back
Finding Meaning After My Husband's Public Death
Knock Knock, Who's There? Bob the Drag Queen
What's Going On With Student Loans?
"This Isn't Just About Abortion": What the End of Roe Means to You
Bottled Up: Your Stories About Alcohol
The Highs and Lows of Being a Starbucks Union Organizer
“No Call Goes Unanswered”: A Lifeline in Wyoming
The Very Hot Marriage of Niecy Nash and Jessica Betts
Cut Loose: Your Stories of Breaking Up
'I'm Done Kissing Your Butt': From Manager to Labor Activist
How Harvey Fierstein's Bad Sex Led to Good Art
What Our Teachers Are Carrying
Maria Hinojosa on Partying, Partnership, and Her New Pulitzer
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Modern West
Stuff You Should Know
On Being with Krista Tippett
TED Radio Hour
Planet Money
The Dinner Party Download