DoubleVision Podcast (by DoubleVision Blog)

When Kindness Gets Complicated: A Conversation with Rebekah Taussig on Motherhood, Messiness & Magic

49 min · 10 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio When Kindness Gets Complicated: A Conversation with Rebekah Taussig on Motherhood, Messiness & Magic

Descripción

Expanding on a conversation Joy and Jenelle began in an earlier episode, “How to Handle Over-Helpers”, [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/doublevision-podcast-by-doublevision-blog/id1843010484?i=1000753385848] they are joined by one of their favorite authors, Rebekah Taussig, for her first appearance on the podcast. Together, they dig into surprisingly similar stories, from growing up with internalized shame around disability to the awkwardness of being prayed for in public to delicately navigating well-meaning people and organizations. Along the way, they unpack the layers inside stories that are sometimes uncomfortable, sometimes funny, and always deeply human. Rebekah Taussig is a writer, speaker, and author of the bestselling memoir Sitting Pretty and We Are the Scrappy Ones. Connect with Rebekah Taussig: * Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/sitting_pretty/] * Substack [https://rebekahtaussig.substack.com/] * Website [https://www.rebekahtaussig.com/]

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episode The Sound of Dance: Reimagining Accessibility in the Performing Arts with Krishna Washburn artwork

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This is Part 1 of a two-part conversation recorded in honor of Mental Health Awareness Month. Joy and Jenelle sit down with Krishna Washburn, founder and artistic director of Dark Room Ballet, for a fascinating deep dive into the world of audio description, blind-led arts, and what true accessibility in the performing arts really looks like. What You’ll Hear in This Episode • What audio description is, and why even sighted audience members often end up loving it • Krishna’s story of attending a live performance with audio description and realizing something fundamental was missing • Why audio description designed for television often fails when applied to live dance, and what needs to change • How Pacific Northwest Ballet is doing it right by integrating audio describers as full members of the production team • What to look for, and what to avoid, when buying tickets to an audio described performance • Krishna’s upcoming free 5-week Audio Description course beginning May 30th, open to everyone with no dance background required Guest: Krishna Washburn Krishna is a ballet educator, audio description specialist, and blind professional dancer. Through Dark Room Ballet, she has trained more than 1,500 dancers and developed tuition-free collegiate and pre-professional arts training for blind and visually impaired adults. She is also a contributor to the upcoming Oxford Handbook of Ballet Pedagogy. Links & Resources Dark Room Ballet https://darkroomballet.com [https://darkroomballet.com] Email Dark Room Ballet info@darkroomballet.com [info@darkroomballet.com] Free 5-Week Audio Description Course https://darkroomballet.com [https://darkroomballet.com] Joy’s “Blind Dance Mom” post [https://doublevisionblog.com/2023/03/01/blind-dance-mom-accessible-moments-matter/] Pacific Northwest Ballet https://www.pnb.org [https://www.pnb.org] Double Vision Blog https://www.doublevisionblog.com [https://www.doublevisionblog.com] Voicemail Line 949-414-8336

27 de may de 202630 min
episode When Kindness Gets Complicated: A Conversation with Rebekah Taussig on Motherhood, Messiness & Magic artwork

When Kindness Gets Complicated: A Conversation with Rebekah Taussig on Motherhood, Messiness & Magic

Expanding on a conversation Joy and Jenelle began in an earlier episode, “How to Handle Over-Helpers”, [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/doublevision-podcast-by-doublevision-blog/id1843010484?i=1000753385848] they are joined by one of their favorite authors, Rebekah Taussig, for her first appearance on the podcast. Together, they dig into surprisingly similar stories, from growing up with internalized shame around disability to the awkwardness of being prayed for in public to delicately navigating well-meaning people and organizations. Along the way, they unpack the layers inside stories that are sometimes uncomfortable, sometimes funny, and always deeply human. Rebekah Taussig is a writer, speaker, and author of the bestselling memoir Sitting Pretty and We Are the Scrappy Ones. Connect with Rebekah Taussig: * Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/sitting_pretty/] * Substack [https://rebekahtaussig.substack.com/] * Website [https://www.rebekahtaussig.com/]

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episode Beyond the Cure Question: Treatment, Identity, and the Future of Vision Care artwork

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episode How to Handle Overhelpers artwork

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We've all been there — someone swoops in to help before you've even asked, grabs something out of your hands, or insists on doing something for you when you were handling it just fine. It's well-meaning. It can also be exhausting. In this episode, Jenelle and Joy get into the messy, nuanced world of helping — when it's welcome, when it crosses a line, and how to handle it when it does. Drawing from their own lived experiences as people with disabilities, they unpack why our culture tends to put helpers on a pedestal, and what gets lost when the focus shifts from the person being helped to the person doing the helping. In this episode: * Why everyone needs help sometimes — and why that's not a disability thing, it's a human thing * How apps like Be My Eyes flip the script on what "helping" can look like when it's actually mutual * The difference between helping someone and taking over for them (and why that distinction matters) * Unsolicited touching, moved belongings, and other "helpful" behaviors that can feel anything but * Where the fear of being a burden comes from — and why it's worth examining * The gap between good intentions and real impact, and how to have the repair conversation when harm happens * Practical ways to set boundaries without feeling like you have to justify yourself * What it actually means to see someone as a whole person — not just their disability If you've ever struggled to speak up when help crosses a line, or wondered how to offer support without overstepping, this one's for you. Resources: "How to Handle Overhelpers" on DoubleVisionBlog [https://doublevisionblog.com/2016/02/18/how-to-handle-over-helpers/]

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