RESOURCES
What the research says, in plain language.
Free content on the six areas, the research, and the tools. No email required to read any of it. No upsell waiting at the end.
Just the information, in language that actually fits.
Six areas. Everything here is free.
Start anywhere. There's no required order.
Appointment preparation, documentation, escalation, diagnostic delay, and the emotional labor of navigating a system with documented bias.
The real cost of chronic illness. The two-tiered access system. Financial shame and why it stays hidden. The unglamorous economics, named directly.
The sick identity paradox. Grief for the future self. Self-trust after gaslighting. Body changes from medication that chronic illness content ignores.
Relational drift, dependency dynamics, the labor of managing others’ responses to your illness, and what connection looks like with fluctuating capacity.
What the methodology is and why it is not wellness. The case for a framework-based approach. For the reader who has already tried everything else.
Disclosure decisions, accommodation, career grief, and the specific labor of performing wellness in professional contexts.
Why your appointment didn’t go the way you prepared for it to go.
You prepared. You went in knowing what you needed to say. And you still left without what you came for. The problem is not your preparation — it is the structural conditions of the appointment itself, and the specific ways those conditions interact with chronic illness presentations.
Sex-based medical bias. What the research actually shows.
The research documenting sex-based bias in medicine is not contested in the peer-reviewed literature. It is, however, often framed as an interpersonal problem — individual physician bias — rather than what the data shows it to be: a structural condition embedded in how medicine was built.
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