On Being Ill: Conversations on Creativity, Disability, and Identity

On Being Ill

On Being Ill is a podcast that aims to platform innovative thinkers working at the intersections of creativity and disability. Executive produced by poet, academic, and author, Dr. Emilia Nielsen, you’ll hear conversations about illness, chronic pain, crip joy, and how we’re harnessing the capacity of our creative praxes to build worlds for disability.

Podcast featured image, displays the podcast name in text: On Being Ill

Our Seasons

Season 1:
Conversations with
Writers on Creativity, Disability,
and Identity

In season one of On Being Ill, we ask ourselves how creative writing can help us to envision radically different futures for disabled and temporarily abled communities alike, why we can’t do it alone, and what happens when we fully embrace the generative capacity of disability and chronic illness.

Season 2:
Conversations with Interdisciplinary Visual Artists on Creativity, Disability, and Identity

In season two of On Being Ill, we talk to visual artists working towards disability justice. We ask how creative practice can turn towards radical justice, what art can look like when we center care and community, and the importance of work that centers our interests, pleasure, and the things we love.

Season 3:
Conversations with Emerging Talent on Creativity, Disability, and Identity

In season three of On Being Ill, we talk with guests who are using creativity to make impact early in their careers. We explore how music, writing, visual art, and nature feed into expression and belonging and why putting health over productivity is essential for wellness, good relationships, & meaningful work. 

Season 4:
Conversations with Indigenous Creatives on Cultures of Care, Creativity, Disability, and Identity

In season four of On Being Ill, we sit down with guests whose practices embody Indigenous storytelling and environmental guardianship. We explore how platenary health, documentary film, and ‘functional junkists’ come together in the journey towards sustainable and joyful futures. 

Season 4: Conversations on Cultures of Care with Indigenous Creatives

Episode 1:
Creating Art for the People

Episode featured image shows a photo of Moneca Sinclaire smiling warmly in front of a brick wall. Displays text: On Being Ill In Conversation with Moneca Sinclaire

Coco joins multidisciplinary Nehinan artist, Moneca Sinclaire, to explore the connections between diabetes research, reflexive healing, and creating upcycled interactive sculpture.

Episode 2:
Cultivating Economies of Care

Episode featured image shows a photo of Angele Alook gazing intensely at the camera. Displays text: On Being Ill In Conversation with Angele Alook

Emilia sits down with multidisciplinary scholar and filmmaker, Dr. Angele Alook, to discuss the transformative potential of intersectional Indigenous feminist research.

Episode 3:
Tracing Stories like Rivers

Episode featured image shows a photo of Lyana Patrick smiling energetically in front of a suspension bridge in a heavily forested trail. Displays text: On Being Ill In Conversation with Lyana Patrick

Emily hosts Dr. Lyana Patrick, a community-engaged researcher and filmmaker, for a conversation that weaves together storytelling, land-based knowledge, and planetary health.


Season 4: Full Episode Details

Episode 1: Creating Art for the People

Episode featured image shows a photo of Moneca Sinclaire smiling warmly in front of a brick wall. Displays text: On Being Ill In Conversation with Moneca Sinclaire

With Moneca Sinclaire

See season 4, episode 1 transcript and show references (PDF).

Executive Producer: Emilia Nielsen
Producer(s): Emily Blyth and Coco Nielsen
Music by: @princeshima

Episode Title: Creating Art for the People

Guest: Moneca Sinclaire

What role can writing, reflection, and the help of a good counsellor play in a journey towards healing? How can storytelling help to complexify the field of diabetes research? And why, amidst a culture that expects self-doubt, is it so important to sometimes just say “eff this, I’m doing it anyways!” In this episode, Coco sits down to discuss these questions and more with Dr. Moneca Sinclaire, a multidisciplinary Nehinan artist and researcher who upcycles trash into interactive sculptures that even the teenagers down the block want to play with.

You can follow Moneca on Instagram @moneca_sinclaire.


Episode 2: Cultivating Economies of Care

Episode featured image shows a photo of Angele Alook gazing intensely at the camera. Displays text: On Being Ill In Conversation with Angele Alook

With Angele Alook

See season 4, episode 2 transcript and show references (PDF).

Executive Producer: Emilia Nielsen
Producer(s): Emily Blyth and Coco Nielsen
Music by: @princeshima

Episode Title: Cultivating Economies of Care

Guest: Angele Alook

What projects might you find in the research portfolio of an Indigenous feminist sociologist with a penchant for labour studies? Is it possible for a 6-person team to co-author a truly cohesive book on climate change? And how do we go about restoring balance in a world based in greed and excess? In this episode, Emilia sits down to discuss these questions and more with Dr. Angele Alook, a multidisciplinary scholar and filmmaker whose recent documentary, Pîkopayin, explores the impact of industry on her home community of Big Stone Cree Nation.

You can watch Angele’s film Pîkopayin at JustPowers.ca.

To learn more, check out Angele’s book, The End of This World


Episode 3: Tracing Stories like Rivers

Episode featured image shows a photo of Lyana Patrick smiling energetically in front of a suspension bridge in a heavily forested trail. Displays text: On Being Ill In Conversation with Lyana Patrick

With Lyana Patrick

See season 4, episode 3 transcript and show references (PDF).

Executive Producer: Emilia Nielsen
Producer(s): Emily Blyth and Coco Nielsen
Music by: @princeshima

Episode Title: Tracing Stories like Rivers

Guest: Lyana Patrick

Is there a connection between storytelling and wellbeing? How can we find beauty among lands and waters devastated by industry? And how does land-based knowledge and teaching defy disciplinary divisions and instead invite collaboration? In this episode, Emily sits down to discuss these questions and more with Dr. Lyana Patrick, a community-engaged researcher and filmmaker whose upcoming feature, Nechako, explores the impact of industry on the Nechako river and its people.

Be sure to stay tuned for updates so you don’t miss her upcoming feature film Nechako.

You can follow Lyana on X @LyanaPatrick.


Season 4 of On Being Ill is supported by H.E.A.L., the Hearts-based Education and Anti-Colonial Learning project, which receives its funding in part from Indigenous Services Canada.

The HEAL Healthcare Project Logo. Features an eagle feather and flowers on a clipboard, which holds a paper reading H.E.A.L Healthcare.
The National Collaborating Centre for Indigenous Health Logo. Features the Center's name and a swirl logo made up of colours from the medicine wheel.
The Health Arts Research Centre Logo. Features the name of the centre to the right of the initials of the centre (HARC).


Season 3: Conversations with Emerging Talent on Creativity, Disability, and Identity

Episode 1: Bending Into So Much More

Episode featured image featuring a photo of Tea Gerbeza. Displays text: On Being Ill In Conversation with Tea Gerbeza

With Tea Gerbeza

See season 3, episode 1 transcript and show references (PDF).

Executive Producer: Emilia Nielsen
Producer(s): Emily Blyth and Coco Nielsen
Music by: @princeshima

Episode Title: Bending Into So Much More

Guest: Tea Gerbeza

What might it look like to bridge the mediums of poetry and paper quilling? How can pain be represented visually? And what the heck is scanography anyways? In this episode, Emilia sits down to discuss these questions and more with Tea Gerbeza, a queer, disabled, and neurodivergent poet, writer, and multimedia artist who works with paper in her visual art, but also creates digital works on her scanner.

You can find more of Tea’s work at Tea’s website.

Be sure to follow Tea on Instagram @poetgerby; to see Tea’s paper quilling work, follow @teaandpaperdesigns


Episode 2: Reclaiming a Future Through Music

Episode featured image featuring a photo of Kate Lahey. Displays text: On Being Ill In Conversation with Kate Lahey

With Kate Lahey

See season 3, episode 2 transcript and show references (PDF).

Executive Producer: Emilia Nielsen
Producer(s): Emily Blyth and Coco Nielsen
Music by: @princeshima

Episode Title: Reclaiming a Future Through Music

Guest: Kate Lahey

When is it time to step back from community organizing to take care of one’s own health? What happens when you go from listening to music alone in your bedroom to performing on stage alongside your very best friends? And how does hope help to reclaim a future stolen by trauma? In this episode, producer Coco Nielsen sits down to discuss these questions and more with Kate Lahey, a writer, musician, and educator whose work explores intergenerational trauma, material and visual culture, and memory in Newfoundland.

You can find more of Kate’s work at Kate’s website.

Be sure to follow Weary on Instagram @WearyBand. To listen to Weary’s music head to bandcamp or wherever you stream music.


Episode 3: Ushering in a New Kind of Spiritual Health

Episode featured image featuring a photo of Stephanie Blyth. Displays text: On Being Ill In Conversation with Stephanie Blyth

With Stephanie Blyth

See season 3, episode 3 transcript and show references (PDF).

Executive Producer: Emilia Nielsen
Producer(s): Emily Blyth and Coco Nielsen
Music by: @princeshima

Episode Title: Ushering in a New Kind of Spiritual Health

Guest: Stephanie Blyth

How can we integrate more meaning-making into our everyday? What’s the connection between healing and spiritual health? And why is it so important to slow down and feel into something bigger than ourselves? In this episode, producer Emily Blyth sits down to discuss these questions and more with her sister, Stephanie Blyth, a spiritual health practitioner who works in acute care.

You can keep up with Steph’s work by following the Self Care Cafe team’s Instagram page @TeamSelfCareCafe


Season 2: Conversations with Interdisciplinary Visual Artists on Creativity, Disability, and Identity

Episode 1: Telling Stories to Change Systems

Episode featured image featuring Syrus Marcus Ware. Displays text: On Being Ill In Conversation with Syrus Marcus Ware..

With Syrus Marcus Ware

See season 2, episode 1 transcript and show references (PDF).

Executive Producer: Emilia Nielsen
Producer(s): Emily Blyth and Coco Nielsen
Music by: @princeshima

What does storytelling have to do with systems change? How do we build care into our practice and embrace interdependence as mad, deaf, and disabled communities? And what does it look like to turn towards the things that we love? In this episode, producer Emily Blyth sits down with Dr. Syrus Marcus Ware, a scholar, playwright, author, and artist who is helping to build a better future – a future where trans and disabled people live long enough to become elders and where artists have plenty of room to play.

You can find more of Syrus’s work on Syrus’s website.

Be sure to follow Syrus on Instagram @SyrusMarcus


Episode 2: Creating at the Threshold

Episode featured image featuring Kim Edgar. Displays text: On Being Ill In Conversation with Kim Edgar.

With Kim Edgar

See season 2, episode 2 transcript and show references (PDF).

Executive Producer: Emilia Nielsen
Producer(s): Emily Blyth and Coco Nielsen
Music by: @princeshima

What happens when you create a micropress dedicated solely to publishing the work of Northern comic artists? What does art look like at the threshold between genders; between life and death; between material and spiritual worlds? And why is it important to watch ladybugs lay eggs? In this episode, producer Coco Nielsen sits down with Daswson-based multidisciplinary artist Kim Edgar to talk about the importance of cultivating artistic community in the North, why healthy food and secure housing is the first step towards disability justice, and how following interest and pleasure leads to an ever-evolving artistic practice.

You can find more of Kim’s work on Kim’s website.

Be sure to follow them on Instagram @DeadBirdParty


Episode 3: Quilting a More Just Future

Episode featured image featuring Jenna Reid. Displays text: On Being Ill In Conversation with Jenna Reid.

With Jenna Reid

See season 2, episode 3 transcript and show references (PDF).

Executive Producer: Emilia Nielsen
Producer(s): Emily Blyth and Coco Nielsen
Music by: @princeshima

What happens when you join the art of quilting with a rallying call for radical justice? How can we make artist residencies more accessible? And why does it take so long for many of us to claim the title of “artist”? In this episode, Emilia chats with Dr. Jenna Reid, a textile artist who works to uplift and celebrate disabled artists both through her activism and her work as artistic director of Kickstart Disability.

You can follow Jenna on Instagram @Fieldnotes_By_JennaReid.

And be sure to check out Kickstart Disability on Instagram @KickStartDisability


Season 1: Conversations with Writers on Creativity, Disability, and Identity

Episode 1: Chronic Pain as a Relational Experience

Episode featured image featuring Travis Chi Wing Lau. Displays text: On Being Ill In Conversation with Travis Chi Wing Lau.

With Travis Chi Wing Lau

See season 1, episode 1 transcript and show references (PDF).

Executive Producer: Emilia Nielsen
 Producer(s): Emily Blyth and Coco Nielsen 
Music by:
@princeshima

Is vaccine hesitancy unique to our contemporary era? What happens when the way we talk about pain changes from the spiritual and soulful to a purely corporeal experience that can and must be medicated away? And whose pain continues to be taken seriously while the pain of others is purposefully ignored? In this episode, Emilia sits down with Dr. Travis Chi Wing Lau, a scholar and poet who embraces uncertainty and doubt through his creative praxis, builds queer kinship by thinking through pain relationally, and whose work on recovering historical articulations of pain helps shed light on how we think about pain today.

You can find more of Travis’s work on Travis’s website.

Be sure to follow Travis on twitter @Travisclau


Episode 2: “The Field Empties Out and That’s Where Things Can Grow”

Episode featured image featuring Julie Devaney. Displays text: On Being Ill In Conversation with Julie Devaney.

With Julie Devaney

See season 1, episode 2 transcript and show references (PDF).

Executive Producer: Emilia Nielsen
 Producer(s): Emily Blyth and Coco Nielsen 
Music by:
@princeshima

How can anyone even begin to address one of the most broken systems of our time, one that seems to be further splintering into irretrievable pieces everyday–that is, the health care system.

In this episode, Emilia sits down with Dr. Julie Devaney, a chronically-ill practitioner and patient advocate who believes in the power of cultivating presence in order to make space for healing, and who turns to fiction writing, in part, to imagine what living with robust health might feel like.

You can find more of Julie’s work on Julie’s website.


Episode 3: Refusing to be Disciplined by our Discipline

Episode featured image Ela Przybylo. Displays text: On Being Ill In Conversation with Ela Przybylo.

With Ela Przybylo

See season 1, episode 3 transcript and show references (PDF).

Executive Producer: Emilia Nielsen
 Producer(s): Emily Blyth and Coco Nielsen 
Music by:
@princeshima

Have you ever wondered about the connections between chronic pain and menstrual pain? Or how we might be able maintain not only a commitment to, but an erotic sense of interest in our research, writing, and other creative acts? In this episode, Emilia sits down with Dr. Ela Przybylo, a “polydisciplinamorous” scholar who is exploring and expanding ideas of eros through her pursuit of feminist, queer, and sexuality studies alongside her work in asexuality studies and feminist open-access publication.

You can find more of Ela’s work on Ela’s website.

Be sure to follow Feral Feminisms–of which Ela is a founding and managing editor–on Twitter @FeralFeminisms


Meet the On Being Ill Podcast Team

Portrait of Coco Nielsen

“On Being Ill is an earnest offering to anyone who might resonate with conversations around illness, pain, disability–and why we turn to creativity.”

Coco Nielsen, Producer

Coco Nielsen (they/them) is a queer non-binary white settler who recently moved to the unceded traditional territories of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations. They are a visual artist and co-producer of the podcast On Being Ill. Coco’s introduction to the world of audio production was through campus and community radio–which still holds a meaningful place in their heart. Coco finds hope in DIY or DIT (do-it-together) culture and is passionate about cultivating containers where low-barrier skillbuilding and education can flourish. Coco is grateful to anyone who makes them laugh, places that help bring them into mindful presence, and experiences that crack open the purposeful isolation of our urban environments in order to let our humanity show through.

Portrait of Dr. Emilia Nielsen with her wonderful dog Pippa.

“What a distinct joy to be in conversation with such evocative writers and creative people because of this podcast!”

Emilia Nielsen, Executive Producer

Emilia Nielsen (she/her) is the author of the award-winning book, Disrupting Breast Cancer Narratives: Stories of Rage and Repair (University of Toronto Press, 2019) recipient of The American Folklore Society’s Elli Köngäs-Maranda Prize as well as two collections of poetry. Body Work (Signature Editions, 2018) was a finalist for a Lambda Literary Award, the League of Canadian Poets’ Pat Lowther Memorial Award and took third place in the Fred Cogswell Award for Excellence in Poetry. Her first book of poetry, Surge Narrows (Leaf Press, 2013), was a finalist for the Gerald Lampert Memorial Award. She is a professor in the Department of Social Science at York University and teaches in the Health & Society Program. Currently, she divides her time between Tkaronto and Amiskwacîwâskahikan the current and ancestral home of many Indigenous peoples and brought into treaty relationship by Treaties 13 and 6.

Portrait of Emily Blyth

“As someone living with chronic illness, working with On Being Ill brought me a sense of community that I hope will extend to our listeners.”

Emily Blyth, Producer

Emily Blyth (she/her) is a White settler who moved to the unceded traditional xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) territories in 2021 where she is grateful to continue working to grow connections with community and current and future Elders as she researches the public health impacts of police violence at Simon Fraser University. Her community-based research is oriented at promoting well-being for those impacted by media exposure to oppressive policing practices, and has been awarded SSHRC-Canada Graduate Scholarship and the 2023 Mahmoud Eid Graduate prize which recognizes the most promising graduate-level research investigating media and diversity in Canada.


Get In Touch

You can also email us directly at onbeingillpodcast@gmail.com, we’d love to hear from you.


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Project funded by a 2020-2022 SSHRC Insight Development Grant