• Snack Chats Episode #4 - Dr. Audrey Evans and the Care System She Changed Forever
    Mar 30 2026

    She didn’t just challenge the system.

    She built a better one.

    In this Snack Chat episode of Unlabelled and Limitless, we explore the story of Dr. Audrey Evans, a pioneer in pediatric oncology and the woman behind one of the most impactful care models in modern medicine.

    At a time when pediatric oncology was barely recognized, Dr. Evans was already shaping it. She developed the Evans staging system for neuroblastoma, helping to transform how childhood cancer was understood and treated.

    But her impact didn’t stop at medicine.

    She saw something others overlooked. Families were being separated from their children during treatment, not by choice, but by cost, distance, and logistics.

    And she refused to accept that.

    What started as an idea became the first Ronald McDonald House, a model that has since grown into a global system supporting families through some of the hardest moments of their lives.

    This episode explores what happens when someone refuses to accept “good enough” and why being labeled “too much” is often the beginning of meaningful change.

    Key themes include:
    • Dr. Audrey Evans and pediatric oncology
    • The development of the Evans staging system
    • Neuroblastoma and advancements in treatment
    • Holistic care and family-centered medicine
    • The origin of the Ronald McDonald House
    • Challenging systems and building new ones
    • Women in medicine and leadership
    • Persistence, advocacy, and impact
    • Redefining what “too much” really means
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    5 mins
  • Episode 31 - Hypatia of Alexandria and the Cost of Being Brilliant
    Mar 25 2026

    She was brilliant, influential, and unafraid to be seen.

    And that made her dangerous.

    In this episode of Unlabelled and Limitless, part of our Formerly Too Much series for Women’s Appreciation Month, we explore the life of Hypatia of Alexandria, a mathematician, astronomer, and philosopher who lived more than 1600 years ago.

    In a world where women were not expected to lead intellectual life, Hypatia did exactly that. She taught publicly, advised political leaders, and became one of the most respected thinkers of her time.

    But influence comes with visibility. And visibility, in the wrong system, can become a threat.

    As political and religious tensions in Alexandria intensified, Hypatia found herself at the intersection of power, identity, and ideology. She was no longer seen as a scholar, but as a problem.

    In 415 CE, she was killed by a mob.

    This episode explores how her story reflects a pattern we still see today. Women who step outside expectations are often labeled before they are understood.

    Because sometimes what is called “too much”… is simply a different kind of brilliance.

    Key themes include:
    • Hypatia of Alexandria and her historical significance
    • Women in intellectual leadership in the ancient world
    • Alexandria as a center of knowledge and conflict
    • Power, politics, and religious tension
    • The intersection of influence and identity
    • The silencing of intellectual women
    • How narratives about women evolve over time
    • Brilliance vs disruption in different contexts
    • Neurodivergent traits and cognitive styles (historical lens)
    • The “Formerly Too Much” pattern across history
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    10 mins
  • Episode 30 - Joan of Arc: She Was Called Dangerous… Then Became a Saint
    Mar 24 2026

    She was labeled dangerous, irrational, and too much.

    But history tells a different story.

    In this episode of Unlabelled and Limitless, part of our Formerly Too Much series for Women’s Appreciation Month, we explore the life of Joan of Arc, a teenage girl who defied every expectation placed on her and changed the course of history.

    Born into poverty in 15th-century France, Joan claimed to hear divine voices guiding her to lead an army. At just 17, she stepped into a role no woman was meant to occupy, and succeeded.

    But her story didn’t end in victory.

    Captured, tried for heresy, and executed at 19, Joan was condemned by the very systems she disrupted. And yet, decades later, that same system reversed its judgment. Her trial was declared corrupt. Her name was cleared. And centuries later, she was canonized as a saint.

    This episode explores what her story reveals about how society labels women before it understands them.

    Was Joan of Arc dangerous… or simply different in a way her world could not yet explain?

    Because sometimes the line between “too much” and extraordinary is only visible in hindsight.

    Key themes include:
    • Joan of Arc’s life and historical context
    • Women, power, and rigid gender roles in the 1400s
    • The Hundred Years’ War and political tension
    • Religious visions and interpretation
    • The trial of Joan of Arc and power structures
    • From heretic to saint: rewriting history
    • How society labels women before understanding them
    • Neurodivergence, perception, and historical figures
    • The difference between danger and difference
    • The “Formerly Too Much” pattern across history
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    10 mins
  • Episode 29 - Reframing Paris Hilton: Beyond Stereotypes
    Mar 23 2026

    For years, Paris Hilton was dismissed as a joke. A rich, clueless socialite, famous for being famous.

    But what if that version of her was never the full story?

    In this episode of Unlabelled and Limitless, part of our Formerly Too Much series for Women’s Appreciation Month, we revisit the narrative around Paris Hilton and explore how quickly we label women, and how slowly we question those labels.

    From The Simple Life to her career in music and business, and later, her advocacy work and public conversations around ADHD, this episode unpacks the tension between persona and reality.

    It also explores the possibility that what looked like performance, privilege, or detachment may have been something else entirely. Branding. Protection. Masking. Survival.

    Because when the story shifts, so does the meaning.

    This isn’t just about Paris Hilton. It’s about how often we reduce women to something easier to consume, and what happens when we finally look again.

    Key themes include:
    • Paris Hilton and the “dumb blonde” stereotype
    • The role of media in shaping public perception
    • The Simple Life and constructed personas
    • Masking, performance, and identity
    • ADHD in women and late diagnosis
    • Privilege, visibility, and public scrutiny
    • The troubled teen industry and Provo Canyon School
    • From survival to advocacy and systemic change
    • Reclaiming labels like “too much”
    • How narratives about women are formed and challenged
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    13 mins
  • Episode 28 - Neurodiversity Celebration Week, Zoey’s Favorite Book, and Big Ideas
    Mar 18 2026

    In celebration of Neurodiversity Celebration Week, this episode of Unlabelled and Limitless takes a slightly different approach.

    Instead of speaking with experts or researchers, Lois sits down with someone who experiences the world through a beautifully unique lens every single day: Zoey, an autistic child and the daughter of Kay.

    Together, they talk about Zoey’s favorite book, All Families Are Different by Jacques Bastien and Dahcia Lyons-Bastien, a story inspired by their daughter Dahlia and the many different kinds of friendships and families that exist in the world.

    From kindness and respect to emotions, nature walks, creativity, and even naming frogs and snakes, this conversation offers a glimpse into how Zoey understands the world around her.

    Along the way, Zoey shares her thoughts about school, time blindness, drawing, nature, and her dream of becoming a nurse one day. The discussion also touches on how stories, friendships, and supportive environments can help children learn about themselves and others.

    This episode is a reminder that neurodiversity isn’t just a concept or a diagnosis. It’s a lived experience, full of curiosity, creativity, humor, and insight.

    Sometimes the most meaningful lessons about understanding differences come from simply listening.

    Key themes include:
    • Celebrating Neurodiversity Celebration Week through a child’s voice

    • Zoey’s favorite book and what it teaches about kindness and respect

    • All Families Are Different by Jacques Bastien and Dahcia Lyons-Bastien

    • How stories help children understand different families and friendships

    • A child’s perspective on emotions, anxiety, and growing up

    • Neurodivergent experiences like time blindness and deep focus

    • Creativity, nature, curiosity, and the joy of learning

    • Why listening to neurodivergent children matters

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    52 mins
  • Episode 27 - Ada Lovelace and the Power of Poetical Science
    Mar 16 2026

    In celebration of Women’s History Month, this episode of Unlabelled and Limitless explores the story of Ada Lovelace, a woman whose ideas about computing were more than a century ahead of their time.

    Often described as the world’s first computer programmer, Lovelace didn’t just understand mathematics. She combined logic with imagination in a way that allowed her to see possibilities others missed entirely. At a time when most people viewed Charles Babbage’s Analytical Engine as nothing more than a complex calculator, Lovelace recognized something far more powerful: a machine capable of manipulating symbols, patterns, and even music.

    In this conversation, Lois is joined by her brother Ian to explore the remarkable thinking behind Ada Lovelace’s work and her concept of “poetical science.” Together they reflect on how her ability to connect creativity with mathematics allowed her to imagine the future of computing long before the technology existed.

    They also explore the historical context of Victorian England, the barriers women faced in scientific spaces, and how Lovelace’s ideas were initially dismissed before later being recognized as visionary.

    As part of our Formerly Too Much series for Women’s History Month, Ada Lovelace’s story reminds us that the qualities once labeled as excessive, unconventional, or unrealistic are often the same qualities that allow people to see beyond the limitations of their time.

    Key themes include:
    • Ada Lovelace’s role in the early conceptualization of computing

    • The meaning of poetical science and why imagination matters in innovation

    • How pattern recognition and systems thinking shape groundbreaking ideas

    • The barriers women faced in Victorian scientific and academic spaces

    • Why visionary ideas are often misunderstood in their own time

    • What Ada Lovelace’s legacy teaches us about creativity, technology, and possibility

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    44 mins
  • Episode 26 - Attachment Across the Lifespan: Understanding Ourselves and Each Other - Part 4
    Mar 13 2026

    In the final episode of this four-part series on attachment across the lifespan, Lois and Faye bring together the themes explored throughout the conversation and reflect on what it means to better understand ourselves.

    The discussion moves through topics such as rejection sensitivity, justice sensitivity, and the emotional patterns that often emerge for neurodivergent individuals navigating relationships, work environments, and social expectations.

    Lois and Faye explore how receiving a diagnosis or understanding neurodivergence can act as a lens for revisiting past experiences with greater clarity and compassion. Rather than changing who we are, that understanding often helps reduce shame and allows us to reinterpret moments that once felt like personal failures.

    The conversation also touches on the cultural context of attachment and identity, highlighting how societal expectations, upbringing, and environment shape the way we relate to ourselves and others.

    As the series closes, the focus shifts toward a broader perspective on attachment theory and the importance of approaching psychological concepts with curiosity rather than quick labels. Understanding these frameworks can be empowering, but only when used with nuance and self-awareness.

    Ultimately, this episode highlights a central theme running through the entire series: identity, attachment, and belonging are not fixed states. They are evolving processes shaped by relationships, culture, and the ongoing work of understanding ourselves.

    Key themes include:

    ✨ Rejection sensitivity dysphoria and emotional interpretation ✨ Justice sensitivity and moral development ✨ Neurodivergence and attachment patterns in relationships ✨ Diagnosis as a lens for self-understanding rather than limitation ✨ Cultural influences on identity, belonging, and emotional processing ✨ Moving from shame to awareness and self-compassion

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    34 mins
  • Episode 25 - Attachment Across the Lifespan: Belonging, Identity, and Change - Part 3
    Mar 10 2026

    In Part 3 of this four-part conversation on attachment across the lifespan, Lois and Faye take a reflective look back at their psychology master’s research and how their understanding of attachment, belonging, and identity has evolved over time.

    Revisiting their academic work a year later, they explore how theories of cognitive and social psychological development intersect with lived experience. The discussion highlights how identity is shaped through relationships, environments, and the ongoing process of understanding ourselves within the groups we belong to.

    The episode also examines the tension between attachment and belonging. While attachment provides safety and security, belonging helps shape our sense of identity. Many relationship challenges emerge in the space between those two needs.

    Through personal reflections, Lois and Faye discuss masking, authenticity, and the struggle many neurodivergent people face when trying to maintain relationships without losing themselves in the process.

    They also explore how modern psychological research increasingly acknowledges brain plasticity and lifelong development, challenging outdated beliefs that personality and relational patterns are fixed in childhood.

    This episode continues the broader conversation about how relationships, identity, and personal growth evolve throughout life, and how understanding those patterns can help us navigate them with greater awareness and compassion.

    Key themes include:

    ✨ The difference between attachment and belonging ✨ Identity formation through relationships and social environments ✨ Revisiting psychological theory through lived experience ✨ Neurodivergence, masking, and authenticity in relationships ✨ Brain plasticity and lifelong psychological development ✨ Rethinking outdated beliefs about fixed personality and attachment patterns

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    36 mins