Mental As Anyone
MAA Interview with Jeremy West.
info_outline MAA #101: With Alex WardMental As Anyone
MAA Interview with Alex Ward.
info_outline MAA #100: With Gillian CosgriffMental As Anyone
MAA Interview with Gillian Cosgriff.
info_outline MAA #099: With Sam PetersenMental As Anyone
MAA Interview with Sam Petersen.
info_outline MAA #098: With Lauren BokMental As Anyone
MAA Interview with Lauren Bok.
info_outline MAA #097: With Dilruk JayasinhaMental As Anyone
Interview with Dilruk Jayasinha.
info_outline MAA #096: With Greg FidelerMental As Anyone
MAA Interview with Greg Fideler
info_outline MAA #095: With Ben SteelMental As Anyone
MAA Interview with Ben Steel
info_outline MAA #094: With Katrina FlemingMental As Anyone
Mental As Anyone Interview with Katrina Fleming.
info_outline MAA #093: With Jess PearmanMental As Anyone
Interview with Jess Pearman.
info_outlineInterview with Melbourne Radio Presenter, DJ, Artist and Comedian Eva Lubulwa. Eva started on radio 2 years ago and found her way onto Triple R (102.7FM). Tune in to hear her show Highly Melanated on Mondays from 10pm to Midnight. Eva also started stand-up comedy this year and performed in 2 shows in Melbourne Fringe: a show with all-African performers called Laughs with Akwasi, and an all-female show called Pick a Dick.
We discuss: Eva’s Ugandan-Australian heritage, the challenge of finding appropriate support for mental health issues and the high price we pay for good mental health, having ADD and wanting to manage it without medication, bouts with an eating disorder, expressing her experiences of racism on stage, how racism has affected her in every way, growing up in Canberra, marrying at a young age, travelling from Australia to Europe without flying and the racism she experienced around the world, her healing time living in Brussels, learning about race in retrospect and how she had subconsciously conformed in her childhood, the danger of assimilation, different levels of mental illness, the one decision her husband made that led to Eva’s decision to end the marriage, Eva’s adopted children and her desire to have Ugandan babies, the notion that some aspects of mental health can be cured by community, the love for her kids helping to manage her mental health, helpful vs unhelpful coping mechanisms, Eva’s superpower, the freedom of expanding into our full selves, and Eva’s message that healing can come in surprising forms so keep looking for things that make your heart sing and follow them.