Who are we? No, really? Are we our bodies, our abilities? Our race, our gender, our age? Our passion or our role in our family?
For as long as human beings have existed, we have been seeking a sense of belonging. We’re wired for it. And so when your sense of belonging, and therefore your very identity, is questioned, it can have an incredibly destabilising and traumatic effect.
Just ask Jacinta Parsons — broadcaster, writer, public speaker, mother and autoimmune disease survivor. Over the past two decades, Parsons has had more identities crumble than most. But in the unmaking of her, she has managed to remake herself — and find a new sense of belonging.
The unmaking process
Most public figures have a well-thought-out, tightly edited, deeply researched summary of…
