Episode 171: Unconventional

I’m willing to fail in what I do, and that feels like success to me...that’s part of why I feel successful.
— Erica Heilman
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Erica Heilman in a barn with Vermont dairy farmer Doug Lillie

Erica Heilman is the host of the podcast Rumblestrip. The Atlantic recently named her series ‘Our Show’ the best podcast of 2020. But before she was a brilliant podcaster, Erica was a lot of other things. She was a seller of muffins, she was a theater performer, she milked cows, she worked on a TV news show, then in documentaries, then for a healthcare website…and that’s not all.

It took Erica a while to get where she wanted to be. And she’ll be the first to admit she had no idea where that was.

She is not the only person who’s struggled to work out, what am I meant to be doing? What am I good at? How best do I use the skills I actually have? Some of us take longer to get there. We wish it were different, but it’s not. This is a show about the messiness of the unconventional career path.

You can also read a transcript of the show.


Further listening: If you haven’t listened to Erica’s show before, here’s a link to the page for her latest interview with Leland, part of which I played in the podcast. From that page you can link to all past interviews with Leland going back to when he was 10.

Her series ‘Our Show’ is truly fantastic. Start with episode one.

I also loved this episode, Joslyn House, from last year about a bunch of older Vermonters living together in a house. Maybe that sounds boring. It isn’t - it’s revelatory.

I did an interview with Erica earlier this year about being an independent podcaster, the origins of podcasting, and how much podcasting has changed since we both started. You can find parts one and two of that interview on my personal website.

Episode 170: Emergency: Women in Medicine during Covid

It is extraordinary to think that you can take an entire workforce of humans and traumatize them internally and externally for an entire year...and then expect them to just be fine. That’s just not reasonable.
— Dr. Dara Kass

Dara Kass had always known emergency medicine was for her. She loved the excitement of the ER, the fact that she always had too much to do. It was only when she had a baby that she realized the emergency room, like so many other workplaces, wasn’t going to fit in with her - she was expected to fit in with it. She set out to change that for her and everyone else.

But when Covid-19 hit New York last spring, Dara was presented with challenges she could never have imagined - catching the virus herself, protecting her family, working through a relentless pandemic, and the loss of a colleague to suicide.

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Dara kass next to the mask tree in her family living room

She still wants to bring gender equity to emergency medicine. But she says workers’ mental health has to take priority now and as we emerge from this pandemic.

Dara also addresses the difference between vaccine hesitancy and being an ‘anti-vaxxer,’ and unpicks the vaccine conspiracy theory aimed squarely at young women.

You can also read a transcript of the show.


Further reading: FemInEM is the organization Dara co-founded that advocates for women in emergency medicine.

Dr. Lorna Breen took her own life in April 2020. This is the foundation her family started to bring attention to the problem of healthcare worker burnout. They’ve also introduced a bill that, if passed, will fund initiatives to help prevent suicide and burnout among medical professionals.