Episodes
Overcoming Mental Health Stigma, 10bigideas Scotland: Ailie Ross-Oliver,
3rd year Politics undergraduate, joins Harriet Harris, to talk about
her policy research into mental health stigmatisation, as part of the
student-led think-tank, the Buchanan Institute, which has just launched its ‘10
Big Ideas for Scotland’. When our mental health deteriorates we can be most
concerned to come across as seeming ok, because we fear or experience being
stigmatised. Ailie and colleagues propose legislative...
Published 04/26/21
Let’s Talk podcast,
Islamophobia Awareness
In this episode, I am joined
by staff member Umar Malik and PhD student Estifa’a Zaid, for a special
recording made in Islamophobia Awareness Month. Estifa’a and Umar talk about
their experiences of growing up as Muslims in the UK, of coming to normalise Islamophobic
behaviour, and of bracing themselves for reprisal attacks after terrorist
incidents (so-called ‘Islamist’ or otherwise). They talk about reporting hate
crimes, and why people may...
Published 11/26/20
In this podcast, recorded especially in hybrid times when
many students are self-isolating in their halls and flats, and doing their
learning digitally, I am joined by international fitness trainer Ricky Long.
Ricky and his partner Lyndsey Morrison have put together a team of fitness
experts who are providing streamed workouts especially for those who are stuck
indoors. On most days there are 3 exercise work-outs a day – amazing and all
free of charge to members of the University. Ricky talks...
Published 10/21/20
Holly McConnell is a 2nd year PE undergraduate, who began university at
the age of 16, and in lockdown is combining university work with supporting her
parents, who are both profoundly deaf. Holly tells us about the Youtube videos
that she is making with her Mum, sharing signs so that others can learn more
about British Sign Language. She also talks about growing up with sign language
as her first language, and learning English at nursery age. She talks about
moving into halls and starting...
Published 09/11/20
Alison Hendry is the British Sign Language Development Officer with the
University of Edinburgh Student Disability Service. She is joined for this
podcast by her BSL interpreter Anna Spence.
Alison tells us about the challenges for communication and technology
that lockdown presents for her, and her appreciation of the BSL Scotland Act,
which led to the creation of her post at the University, and which ensures that
all Scottish Government Covid19 updates have an interpreter present so that...
Published 08/22/20
Heather, student mental health and influencing public policy
Heather McAdam, a third year undergraduate intercalating with Global
Health, and soon to return to the Medical School, is also the Student Association
Rep for the Medical School and founder of the mental health support community,
WellMed. Heather spoke in the previous Let’s Talk podcast series, on suicidality.
Now she is back to tell us about her work during lockdown with the Scottish
Government Mental Health Directorate,...
Published 08/18/20
Martha Pollard, a PhD student in Alzheimer and Dementia Research at the
University of Edinburgh tells us about the challenges of lockdown for those
living with dementia and for their carers, especially now that they are unable
to get the company and respite of meeting in groups, or of receiving specialist
care in their homes. Martha also talks about the interruption that lockdown
brings to her doctoral research, now that she cannot access dementia wards. We
don’t hear much about research...
Published 07/14/20
Dr Anthony Newton, Senior Tutor
in the School of GeoSciences, talks about the changes that lockdown is bringing
within his School, from missing the chats by the kettle that bond a team and
also often lead to important information or discoveries, through redesigning
activities and assignments when all the field trips are cancelled, to rethinking
multiple possible scenarios for how next year might look. We get insights from
Anthony into how students and staff are staying connected, and we hear...
Published 07/01/20
Professor
Liz Grant, Director of the Global Health Academy and Co-Director of the University
of Edinburgh Global Compassion Initiative, gives us a global perspective on the
pandemic, and its effects on lower income countries. Liz is a palliative care
specialist, and describes the need for doctors, families and carers to be quickly
trained in end-of-life care, because there usually isn’t time to bring in
specialised palliative care teams. Liz also talks about her work with the World
Health...
Published 06/24/20
Eva
Mutua, a Vet School Masters student from Kenya, is finding things to be
grateful for during lockdown. Eva describes how a compassion workshop and
compassion practices have enabled her to face fears. Before lockdown was
announced, Eva was frightened of being alone, regardless of the pandemic. The
compassion workshop that she attended came just in time for her to find ways of
turn her fears of loneliness into the discovery of the fruits of solitude. She
is enjoying getting to know herself...
Published 06/17/20
Alan
Murray, Professor of Engineering, and Assistant Principal, Academic Support, talks
about support for depression during lockdown, how powerful and healing it is to
face your feelings, writing songs, the
joys of crafting, and his granddaughter's 7th birthday party on Zoom.
For Coronavirus updates and advice,and FAQs please see the University
webpages here: https://www.ed.ac.uk/news/covid-19
The Chaplaincy blogs ‘For Times Like These’ https://www.ed.ac.uk/chaplaincy/for-times-like-these...
Published 06/05/20
What is
like finishing up your degree and starting your new job, unable to see anyone
outside your own flat? Amanda Scully, 4th year International
Relations undergraduate and forthcoming Vice-President Communities with the
Student Association, tells us about managing assessment changes and the library
closure, ending her internship, and getting ready to start her busy Sabbatical
Officer year, all from the confines of her small flat in Edinburgh. She also
talks about her decision to remain in...
Published 06/03/20
Rosie Taylor is coming to the end of her 3rd year as a
Biology undergraduate. She is the outgoing LGBT+ Officer with the Student
Association, and a founding member of WellComm, the award-winning wellbeing and
community organisation for STEM subjects at the University of Edinburgh. Rosie
gave interviews in our previous Let’s Talk podcast series on Mental Health. In
this episode during lockdown, Rosie talks about family estrangement in times of
emergency, how overwhelming it can be to have all...
Published 06/03/20
Dr Marti
Balaam from the Medical School and Nursing Studies talks about how compassion
for ourselves as well as for others is so needed during the Covid19 lockdown.
Marti talks about equipping nursing and medical students for going onto
hospital wards, reminding them to look after themselves as well as their
patients. She describes what happened when she and her household fell ill with
suspected Covid19: how fear kicked in at first, and then she remembered what
she teaches others about...
Published 05/15/20
Dr Donna
Dalgetty, a former PhD student, and former Medical and Nursing Fellow at the
University of Edinburgh, is now an emergency doctor on the Isle of Whyte. She
gives us some amazing insights into life on the wards during the Covid19 pandemic:
the ways in which the crisis is changing the competitive nature of the NHS, and
giving doctors a greater sense of permission to look out for one another and
themselves. Her team is bending over backwards in welcoming the new cohort of
doctors who...
Published 05/15/20
Welcome to the Let’s Talk: Life in
Lockdown series of podcasts from the UoE and Edinburgh Student Association,
keeping us together and sharing experiences in this extraordinary period of
Covid19 social distancing. The University is continuing, but in ways never
before known. Most of us are working and studying away from University
buildings, and in isolation from one another. We are all in this together, but
in vastly diverse circumstances, and it is so interesting to hear from one
another...
Published 05/15/20
Welcome to the Let’s Talk: Life in
Lockdown series of podcasts from the UoE and Edinburgh Student Association,
keeping us together and sharing experiences in this extraordinary period of
Covid19 social distancing. The University is continuing, but in ways never
before known. Most of us are working and studying away from University
buildings, and in isolation from one another. We are all in this together, but
in vastly diverse circumstances, and it is so interesting to hear from one
another...
Published 05/14/20
For this podcast I am joined by James Saville, who is the Director of HR.
James talks about his own experience of stress and burn out, and from a perspective of someone who is used to achieving and operating at a senior level, and who also needs to understand work stress, not only because he manages other staff, but because as HR Director he oversees the University’s response to stress at work. James speaks with remarkable openness, warmth and personal insight as we discuss journeys into and...
Published 01/07/20
In this podcast I am joined by 3rd year Medical undergraduate, Heather McAdam. We talk about the mental pain that can lead someone to try to end their life, what helps and what doesn’t help if you are feeling suicidal, or if you are supporting someone who is, and how it is possible to come through a suicide attempt into enjoying and appreciating life in a whole new way.
Heather shares some inspiring tactics that she adopted, and describes how social media was positive in her recovery, for...
Published 01/07/20
Sharing their personal experiences, and their musical tastes, in this podcast are 3rd year undergraduate Stephanie McNair, and Assistant Principal and Professor of Engineering, Alan Murray.
Together, we talk about the tyranny of perfectionism, fearing that we will fail, or that we have failed, and feeling that we are not good enough - imposter syndrome being such a common feeling that affects pretty much all of us at various times.
We also touch on aspects of grief and depression, which...
Published 01/07/20
Talking with me about her experience of grief and loss is 3rd year biology undergraduate Isobel Cordrey. Izzy describes the shock of hearing that her closest childhood friend had died, of finding herself in a role of passing on the news to other friends, of feeling guilty when she isn’t thinking about her friend, and guilty when she is thinking about her ‘instead’ of getting on with her life. Izzy also talks about what helps and what doesn’t when you have lost someone close to you, how a...
Published 01/07/20
Two undergraduates, Rosie Taylor and Stephanie McNair, come together for this podcast to talk about loneliness. More and more people, of all ages, are reporting feeling lonely, and we know that this is bad for our physical and mental health. Rosie Taylor is LGBT+ Officer at the Students’ Association. Rosie and Stephanie give voice to how some of this feels, and how shame and self-judgement worsen loneliness because they make us hide ourselves away. They share their experiences of starting...
Published 12/20/19
Joining me for this podcast are 3rd year Zoology undergraduate Rosie Taylor, and Assistant Principal and Professor of Engineering Alan Murray.
Rosie tells about her experiences of great sadness and despair from when she was very young, Alan from when he was older having first seen family members suffer. They talk about how hard it is to communicate the feelings of heaviness when you are in them, and how hard it is to get out of bed.
Other things we cover in this podcast include: talking...
Published 12/20/19
Welcome to the Let’s Talk series of podcasts from the UoE, where we talk about life and all that it may throw at you at University, focussing on our mental health.
I’m Harriet Harris, The University Chaplain, and each week I’m joined by students or staff of the University who come and talk about their experiences with mental health.
When we’re struggling with our mental health Often we imagine that no one is feeling like we are. It’s such a relief to discover you are not alone , or weird...
Published 12/20/19