Stepping into unfamiliar territory while managing chronic illness? Tune in to our conversation with Yvette, a first-gen coach who knows the struggles firsthand. She offers golden nuggets on managing energy, drawing boundaries, and staying on track when every day brings a new challenge. Discover the art of advocating for yourself, ensuring you get the right accommodations, and handling unwarranted judgments in new spaces. Whether you're venturing into new academic realms, business territories, or personal endeavors with a chronic illness, Yvette's real-life insights and actionable advice will be your compass. Don't miss out on this guide to navigating new spaces with confidence and care.
BY THE TIME YOU FINISH LISTENING, YOU’LL DISCOVER:
To Work With Nikita, Book A Free Sales Call Here.
Loved this episode? Leave a review: https://www.craftedtothrive.com/reviews/new/
Subscribe to the exclusive private-podcast series, Create Your Clarity Mondays, where I help service-based creatives and coaches living with chronic illness get unstuck and grow their businesses with ease in less than 15 minutes.
Follow Nikita on Instagram
Support the show
Subscribe to the Chronically Profitable: The Flare-Proof Path to $100K, A free exclusive weekly email series designed for creatives and women with chronic illnesses. You'll learn how to make a liveable income with your hobbies, professional skills, and innate talents by building a successful online coaching business with simple strategies that work for you, even on flare days and feel better living with chronic illness.
Nikita Williams:
Hey y'all. I am super excited about this episode because we're talking about all things being the first in your family when it comes to starting an online business, to going to college, just being maybe even the first person in your family to come here to the United States or to own a home. So many of us might be those people, and so I'm excited to have this conversation with Dr Yvette Martinez, who's a mother and scholar and academic coach and host of the grad school FIM tour podcast, where she empowers first generation students of color as they navigate higher education. And in this episode we talk about a lot of different things. We go through what it's like to navigate the career and college world as new first people not really having this experience in our families, and also what it looks like to navigate this while being a chronic illness warrior and having your own business or side hustle, as many of these folks have. And then how do we navigate ableism with ourselves, with dealing with chronic illness and dealing with the mental health issues that happen in being the first and going to school or starting a business. It's funny. One of the conversations we had is like even if your family has been born here, lived here. There are a lot of first of this generations like what I'm doing today. I have a business where I talk and connect with people and exchange money to helping them grow in their businesses, and I've never met them and I think about when I helped my grandparents with their business, which was a janitorial business. The way they found clients was like going door to door business to business and finding contracts. And the same thing is for Dr Yvette is. She has family who has brick and mortar businesses and in this digital age, having a business where you're basically having people pay you for creating some kind of portal online to some of our family might seem a little strange, and we're just talking about the landscape of what all that looks like, all while navigating first and being chronic illness warriors so so many gyms. In here you're gonna learn a couple of things how to manage your emotions and your feelings and embrace those different challenges that you're going through. How to have a more sustainable productivity. How to navigate mental health when you're living with chronic illness and being the first in your family to achieve or to do some of the things that we're seeing today so many things. So be here, stay tuned. We're gonna talk about some career rights, as well as some job rights for those with disabilities so many we talked about a lot, so this is gonna be an episode that you don't wanna miss, so stay tuned. Welcome to Crafted to Thrive, the globally ranked podcast for entrepreneurs living with chronic illness. I'm your host, nikita Williams, and after being diagnosed with multiple chronic illnesses myself, I figured out the surprisingly simple missing links to growing a profitable business without compromising my health. Since then, I've helped dozens of women just like you learn how to do the same. If you're ready to own your story and create a thriving business that aligns with your health and wellbeing, you're in the right place. Together, we're shifting the narrative of what's possible for entrepreneurs with chronic illness. This is Crafted to Thrive. I am really excited to have Yvette on the show. She is an amazing lady that I've gotten to connect with recently and a fellow chronic illness warrior. So please tell us a little bit about who you are, what you do, where you're from, and we can get into it.
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
Great. Yes, thank you, I'm so happy to be here. Thanks for having me. So my name is Yvette I also go by Dr Yvette Martina Spoo and I am a first gen Chicana academic coach. I'm actually someone who supports first generation students of color as they navigate higher education and I am also someone who lives with chronic illnesses. I am also neurodivergent, highly sensitive and also strong on the kind of isolate between kind of anxiety and depression, and I'm very open and honest about those things because they definitely impact and inform the way that I work with my clients. So I primarily work with students and early career professionals in supporting them with their writing, with their personal professional development, with getting organized, goal setting and navigating kind of some difficult career and life transitions. So yeah, I'm originally from Southern California, child of a Mexican immigrant, single mom, one of six eldest daughters, so a lot of those things inform my positionality and my identity. So, yeah, I'm happy to share anything else. That's a little bit about me.
Nikita Williams:
That is amazing. I think it's so cool that of the six, you're the oldest. I find like a lot of coaches are like the oldest and like larger families. It's like we've had to learn some of these tools way before we ever knew what we were going to do with them.
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
Yeah, oh. And then just to clarify my bad so I'm the eldest daughter, but I'm the third born, so I'm an adult child but I'm the eldest daughter and, because of gender roles, gender dynamics and cultural expectations, as the eldest daughter in the Mexican immigrant family, had a lot of responsibilities growing up. So, I feel like the eldest in many ways even like, technically I'm a middle child. I got you, I got you, okay, cool.
Nikita Williams:
Okay, so first of all, first generation what does that mean for you? Like, I feel like that's a conversation we don't actually get to have often on the show. So what does that mean for you in your context of what you're doing to help others?
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
Yes, Typically when folks refer to first generation, they're referring to either being first generation in college, meaning that neither one of their parents has completed a four year degree, and then there's also first generation in the US, meaning that your parents migrated to the United States or you are the first, you are the immigrant yourself first to be living in a country. So that actually differentiation is a little bit different between each individual. Like some of us say we're first gen in the US, and they mean they're an immigrant from another country and they're first to kind of reside in that area. And others say they're first in the US, like myself, where their parents came from another country and they're the first to be born and raised in that new country. So for me I'm first gen, consider myself first gen in the US and also first gen in college. And that's really important to me because there is so much left unset about how to navigate a lot of things in life. So if you go to college you know the career, how to navigate, landing a career, developing your career and even the personal development stuff like getting to know yourself, getting to know your values, getting to know your purpose. That's not taught to us and that's the stuff that really gets me going is when I went to college I was constantly feeling like people were speaking another language and there were a lot of things that I didn't know about that setting, and it frustrated me that I was constantly playing catch up. And so for me, with the mission of my business, which is called Grad School Fem Touring and I also have a podcast by that name is to provide Fem Touristhip, meaning feminist social justice, informed mentorship, where I demystify, I break down all these things that are cultural norms within higher ed spaces in particular, to help those who are first in their family kind of better navigate these spaces and to provide the kind of mentorship that I wish I would have had when I was feeling really lost.
Nikita Williams:
That's a really powerful mission and experience. I don't know, I think a lot of us don't recognize the gravity of it until we're in it, right, like you don't realize the big difference because you're like I'm going to school, like it's not, like I'm going to school, they didn't go to school, like that. But hey, I'm going to school, it's not a big deal. And then you realize there's a whole different world and I find that it's a very similar thing with entrepreneurship as well.
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
Oh my gosh yes.
Nikita Williams:
Yeah right, like so. If your family didn't have the traditional and I say traditional in the new age world of traditional online, offline kind of business, I feel like my generation of parents. They definitely felt that entrepreneurship was like boots on the ground, yes, in person, brick and mortar, like cleaning and all these things. And now we have a whole different mindset and generation of how we view business. So, first generation going to college, now also an entrepreneur, helping other people understand what it's like to transition into this world of college, while being the first generation and this is your business as well Like this is a business that you have created to support other people in that world. When you explain that to your family, they must be looking at you like what I don't understand right, even like what does the coach even do?
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
Well, it's funny because when I went to college, I majored in English literature and my mom, who doesn't speak much English she speaks primarily Spanish she would be like Nija, why are you studying English? You speak it so well? And she didn't understand. I was on this trajectory to become a professor Last year well, in 2021, decided to leave my career in higher ed because I had been in higher ed for 10 plus years supporting similar population impressions students of color with the graduate school admissions process, and I told my mom that I was leaving my job to pursue entrepreneurship and she herself has a business. She sells religious articles. She has a brick and mortar shop, she sells products the same thing where like wait what, how does that work? And you'll have to be physically somewhere and you're doing it all on your computer and people pay you. Yeah, so she's still kind of questioning like I don't know what you're doing, but at least as the first in my family I heard someone on my podcast mentioned this like I collect first. So as a first gen individual, I collect first, and so that's what's been, even though it's been a steep learning curve, because I'm only a little over one year into full-time entrepreneurship and I have a lot to learn still to this day. I am confident in my ability to be able to keep learning and to adapt as kind of the hurdles come in and to learn from my failures. I'm doing all right, but I find myself kind of going through a very similar experience as the experience of my clients, where I'm trying to learn a new language, I'm trying to get acquainted with the field, I'm trying to network, I'm trying to learn as much as I can to see what works and to see what works for me, because someone's successful business might be great for them, but they are not me. I have chronic illnesses, I've got to take care of my mental health, I have two kids, I live abroad. All of these things impact the way that I do my work and that's also why I'm a big fan of this concept of sustainable productivity. So finding ways to get work done that's really in tune with your body, with where you are physically, mentally, spiritually on any given day, because when you're chronically ill, like flare ups happen, if you struggle with your mental health, you may have a bad day on a random day in any month, for instance, because for me it can be very cyclical and seasonal too. So, yeah, this entrepreneurship journey has been challenging, but it's also been really rewarding. I'm grateful again that, because I have this second and first-in-experience, it's not as scary for me to try new things.
Nikita Williams:
Yeah, yeah, I think it's really cool. There's so many parallels. I feel like, as a chronic illness warrior and the women I talk to, the line between being first gen, going to school, an entrepreneur here in the states, all of these things. I also feel like there is an essence of that as chronic illness warriors in this world that we live in now, because our parents had stuff going on but they didn't have maybe the answers or even talked about it, and they just pushed through and went and did what they had to do. And now we're in a world where it's like no, don't push through. Like no, tell the doctor, you're crazy, I'm finding another doctor, fire them. You say those kind of things. I know I've had conversations with my family and being like, yeah, I fired my doctor, and they're like what? Like, what do you mean? I'm like I fired my doctor. So even that kind of conversation about chronic illness, how has that informed your life as a mom, as a student yourself and helping other students who might also be dealing with chronic illness as well? We don't even talk about that much, but how has that been part of your journey?
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
Yeah, it's been a huge learning lesson for me developing a chronic illness. So, for those of us that are just fired as disabled, there are those of us that have been born with a disability and there are those of us with visible disabilities and invisible disabilities In my case, invisible disability and also I developed this in my young adult life. So I developed my chronic illnesses in grad school. So grad school was a really formative time and experience for me because of a number of reasons. But beginning with my first two years of graduate school, I was a workaholic. I mean, I've always kind of been that way because that's how I was socialized. I grew up witnessing a bunch of self-sacrificing women in my family in a major key, and so that's what I learned serve others and work, work, work and I worked myself sick. I started to develop stomach issues, I started to develop chronic migraines, I started to develop kind of bladder and pelvic issues. Actually, it wasn't until after grad school that I even got diagnoses and kind of learned a little bit more about what was going on with my body. But yeah, this all started in graduate school. And then I also had a child in grad school and that was another thing that impacted my health, because when I had my son I developed pregnancy complications and then when I gave birth I hemorrhaged. I lost three liters of blood. They had to perform a bunch of procedures to save my life. I nearly nearly, but I did not. I nearly had a hysterectomy and then, after my body had gone through so much trauma, that I think that also impacted my mental health, because I developed severe postpartum depression. And again, I like to talk about my physical health issues and also my mental health issues, because they inform when they go hand in hand If I have a bad pain day, like I'm also going to have a bad mental health day. If the pain is severe enough, it's hard to not get down, or at least that's been my experience. And so, again, like I said before grad school, before developing my chronic illness, I was a workaholic and, I'll be frank, I struggled with internalized ableism. I tried to please others and to work as much as I could and I made myself, I shamed myself to produce, produce, produce, only to make myself sicker. I worked until the point where I could no longer like physically work, and that's not healthy. And so my chronic illnesses forced me to slow down, forced me to take care of myself and then forced me to learn more about this world of kind of disability studies, chronic illnesses and also neurodivergence too. And all of that has helped me to be more compassionate with myself and with others and to be frankly like less ableist, to be kind of like anti-ableist, to kind of focus on increasing accessibility through my work, so by having a podcast, for instance, and sharing information publicly, or having a blog or having transcripts or just like things just to support other folks. There's a lot of mixed feelings because I know some folks can say like, oh, it's such a gift blah blah blah to learn all these lessons, but there's also a lot of grief that happens that goes on when you develop chronic illness or chronic illnesses Because you're grieving the person you once were. If you develop this later on in life, or you're grieving the person that you imagined you would have been without the chronic illnesses, and there are days that suck. I'm just going to say it. It's the truth. It's the truth. Yeah, it's the truth.
Nikita Williams:
I think this year is something I really started to appreciate is the duality, the ability to have a really bad day because everything is bad, and still, at the same time, be hopeful. I feel like sometimes, when we hear and talk about chronic illness and whatever that looks like in your life, whatever place that shows up in your life, visible or invisible, we sometimes hear in a very paradigm, like one focused, facet way, like one angle, and there is no one angle to living with a chronic anything. There is no one way, and I don't think there's enough conversation in the world of like living with chronic illness that there. Yes, mindfulness is great. Yes, positivity to its extent is great. Yes, positive psychology has its place. Yes, all of these things that are here to support us through it are great, but also it sucks sometimes Sometimes. Yeah, exactly so I appreciate you sharing that. And the other piece I want to bring out too is the mental health aspect Of living with chronic illness, right, yes, yes, I always tell people like the one thing that I wish would happen when you were given, especially those really rare chronic illness, like labels, diagnosis, like beyond the pamphlet also, send me to a therapist, like you know. Let's do that too. That's not the conversation we get or tell us the things we might need, might need to give ourselves some space and grace for when we have these things going on. That's not the kind of treatment we get. We get a lot of shame, we get a lot of guilt, we get a lot of things coming at us when we are just finding out these Chronic things that were like but what is this mean? You know? So for the mental health for you, what has been practical for you to cope, endure and Kind of be in that duality of living with chronic illness?
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
So I said this earlier and I'm gonna keep saying it but really getting to know yourself and your body and your mind, your spirit. So for me, for instance, I've been going to therapy since I was 12. At age 12, my father suddenly passed away from a brain aneurysm, and I was a very lucky child that I had a school counselor who actually signed me up for a grief group, and so I started doing these like counseling groups and therapy groups, support groups, in In middle school and then in high school and then in college I was already exposed to the world of therapy and support groups, and so it was not hard for me to go out and seek a therapist and to also get involved in support groups all like Low cost or free of cost, thanks to my health insurance as a college student. And I continued to do that in college and to this day I still I have a therapist. So for my mental health, because of my many years of going to therapy, I know what my triggers are. I know what Tools I have access to in my toolkit that helped me to either not slip into a depression or, if I find myself slipping into a depression, what to do to kind of get out of that fog. And, and similarly with my anxiety, I also know what my anxiety triggers are and a lot of times, some of them Last with one another. My anxiety wants to stay home. My depression doesn't, and I'm in tune enough that I've Managed my mental health pretty well. I'm in a space where I'm I'm functioning and in certain seasons I'm also thriving and I say seasons because I'm not always thriving, you know, I'm also not always struggling, and I'm grateful to have arrived at this space where I'm not always Struggling, because at one point in my life I think I forgot what joy Felt like or what what brought me joy, and so I'm no longer in that space of struggling all the time. So yeah, with my mental health, what are my go-to things? Like I know, I have to get ready. First thing in the morning I like to get ready, shower, put on some makeup, even if I'm not going anywhere, it helps me to feel better. Or I have a stationary bike. Getting some movement in riding my bike, taking a walk, going outside, so having access to the outdoors is really big for me. And then having a routine. So If I don't or if I break, my routine does throw me off a lot and those are just some things that they might work. For other people they might not. But again, it's like figuring out what works for you. Yeah, when you are struggling and it takes time, that's the thing I mean. I'm still a work in progress. I'm still Constantly trying to learn how to like, improve and better manage my mental health issues. It's not like, oh, I'm cured. Yeah, I laugh because that's true for chronic illness. Yeah, like, oh, take that pill or eat that.
Nikita Williams:
Yeah, you know, follow that diet, you're cured.
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
Yeah, it hasn't worked that way for me, yeah.
Nikita Williams:
Yeah, I, I really appreciate you saying that. There's so many things I want to kind of just pull out for everyone who's listening, specifically one this is possible to even like identify what works for you because of really getting knowing you. I agree with you, that's one of the most important pieces to this journey of living with chronic illness is being completely confident and I say that in air quotes y'all. I'm like over here talking with air quotes like Confident to know you know how to get to the you, like the inside of you, because you know other things can get in the way Depression, anxiety can cloud so much of that out. But if you know how to get back to the you that you know, it kind of creates a bit more space, right, more space for the forgiveness you might need to be giving yourself, the grace you might need to be giving yourself the boundaries you might need to be putting in place differently. And it is a holistic kind of thing. It's not just like one time and holistically, today I'm good, I'm, I'm good, I'm done. There's no such thing. There's no such thing. I know this year, for me, like therapy as a woman of color, a Christian therapy is like, has so many different nuances to it, has so many stigmas to it, and I think it's really powerful that you had that kind of access as a young child to know there wasn't anything like added to your plate or shaming to your plate of thinking oh, I might need support, right. I think that is a huge thing that I hope everyone's hearing Like. The reason why I bet it was very confident in like knowing what she needs to do is because she's gotten to know herself and I think that's just such a blessing.
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
And the getting to know yourself piece requires actually spending time and doing that self-reflective work, and that is what I've been able to do through therapy and I know that not everybody has access to therapy. I know that that is very much a privilege. There is the possibility of doing that self-reflection on your own through things like journaling exercises, through taking moments of pause, through writing or just finding ways to record and figure out what has historically worked for you and then trying new things out. So I just wanna kind of mention that that I know that therapy is not accessible for everyone, but even if it's not accessible, you can still learn some tools on your own to try to manage these things and hopefully you can work your way towards when they getting access to that support, professional support.
Nikita Williams:
Yeah, you're right, and we have insurance and it's still extremely expensive. I know Therapists and so I think, whether it's therapy, I also feel like spirituality has a huge part in this. Having a purpose and understanding your purpose and this bigger place that we're all at. I think it definitely adds to your ability to cope and be resilient. That's something I've learned this year. I really have dived into positive psychology and it makes so much sense why the things that we need to have wellbeing and flourishing. One of those things is having a sense of purpose, even during all of the craziness that's happening, and so, whether that's journaling, some people find themselves through singing, creativity. There's so many different ways you can do this without necessarily working with a therapist, but I still think if that's something you want to do, like you were mentioning like, definitely take your steps towards seeking out how it can be possible potentially. So my next question is kind of like how has this served you in starting a business? Like I always feel like living with chronic illness, starting to know yourself and your story, like how has that informed your ability to have like, even though you're still figuring it out, it's only been a year how has it helped you in starting your business?
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
I have a lot of superpowers that I've gained from my chronic illnesses. So you know, one thing that I know I talk a lot about because of being chronically ill and also having two kids, is that I often say that I don't have as much time as other people because my days can be very unpredictable. I don't always know how I'm going to feel on any given day, and so I have to be very strategic about how I do my work, and that's where the sustainable productivity stuff comes from. That's why a lot of people that know me will say that I'm one of the most organized people that they know, and so I've kind of tried to learn these skills of like how can I do more in less time, how can I be more efficient with the little time that I may have on any given day? And so I'll do things like develop standard operating procedures. So anything that I do, you know if I'm doing it more than three times, if it involves more than three steps, I will write that down, so I'll have to remember again in the future. Another thing that it's helped me with is just like time management. I'm really good with time management. I'm really good with project management. I'm a huge fan of like using tools to help you save time so you're not having to do things repetitively if you don't have to. So yeah, for me it's helped me with also, like that self-compassion that I've learned for myself has helped me in supporting others, because a lot of times other people are not compassionate with themselves. They are holding themselves to very, very high standards and they just need someone to be there to remind them that they're doing OK, that sometimes good enough work is fine, that they don't have to be doing everything you know in this like very high, perfectionistic standard, because that is not sustainable. The time management, the project management, the organizational tools all that stuff I've gained through, like over the years, through feeling like, oh, I don't have as much time as other people, so how can I meet the most of the time that I have? Those tools are really helpful, even for folks who are not chronically ill. Even for folks who don't have kids. And for me it's not about like let me help you to do more so that you can burn yourself out. No, it's like do more in less time and then go and live your life. Yeah.
Nikita Williams:
I love that. I love that you tell me if you agree with this. I also feel like being a chronic illness warrior means you know when to say no, yeah, to say yes A lot.
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
Oh my gosh, yes, boundaries, boundaries and advocating for yourself, those are tools I learned from being chronically ill. Yeah, because boundaries, what's that quote like boundaries? Or that point where, like, I can love you and myself, right? Yeah, there's a quote that I just butchered right now.
Nikita Williams:
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I know I know words at quotes, so do that Ask me, but I know what you talking about.
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
So the boundary thing is real. I mean for myself, with my background, my cultural background, in Mexican background, women are expected to be helpers and to be self sacrificing and to think of others and not themselves, and so that turns folks into becoming people Pleasers, becoming perfectionistic, and so for me to push back against that. It has meant learning to say no to things, learning what my, my limits, my boundaries are and enforcing them, and it has not always been easy. Same thing with advocating for myself. That's not easy, but if I'm getting really sick and sicker because of your expectations of me, I need to do something about it. So that can look like requesting accommodations, workplace accommodations. If you're a student, you can get classroom accommodations, and a lot of folks don't realize that if they have access to certain documentation or if they go out and seek it they seek an assessment like they they might be able to get accommodations. I waited for so many years and struggled so much until I finally arrived at a point where I felt comfortable enough to request workplace accommodations, and it was incredibly helpful. So, yeah, advocating for yourself, figuring out what your kind of limitations or boundaries are and then enforcing them, because no one's going to take care of you but you. And if you don't say anything, no one is going to think about it. If, even if you tell someone about what your chronic illness is, no one's going to know it the way that you do, yeah. Yeah.
Nikita Williams:
And it looks different. Like I always tell people, especially with endometriosis, I'm so tired personally and being like, oh, it's just that period thing, I'm like you know, I just like have time, I'm just like it's ignorance, and so I get it. I get it's ignorance, but any disability chronic or physical, visible or invisible looks completely different, no matter the label on every single person. We can all have the same exact diagnosis is, but they will look and feel inside of us completely different. Yes, yes, completely different. And so that self compassion piece that you were talking about earlier comes into play realizing that we all have some stuff, like, whether we know it or not, we all have something, and it's just really giving that space for ourselves and for others to realize. Look, accommodations helps us all get to the end goal. Whatever it is that you are looking to happen right, and that's something I wanna ask you about, like, have you had any fear around like asking or like sharing and being vulnerable, about like, yeah, I need some accommodations and what I do for work or as a professor, as before? Like how has that looked like for you?
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
Like, the short answer is yes. The long answer is in grad school I suffered in silence. I didn't really disclose much about my chronic illnesses because I was afraid of getting discriminated against for that and I wasn't a very toxic doctoral program, unfortunately I did not believe that I would receive the support that I needed and I also wasn't informed about being able to ask for accommodation. So, one, I didn't share and two, I was not directed to those resources because I didn't share. But when I started my academic career and started working in like student support services, academic affairs supporting students, that's when I got a diagnosis of, like my stomach issues and just started to learn more and see more doctors and more specialists to try to figure out what was going on. And in that process that's when I worked with HR to learn more about what accommodations can look like in the workplace. And even then, even though I had the documentation, even though I got the accommodations, I still was met with pushback. I still had people, for instance. So I get really ill in the mornings more so than later in the day. That's not to say that my symptoms just like magically disappear in the afternoon or anything like that, but it tends to be more intense in the morning. So the stomach pain, cramping, stomach issues, having to use the restroom I wake up with migraines, you name it. A lot of times they'll wake up feeling that great and they start to subside later on in the day. So I had workplace accommodations where I could go into work a little later. So I'd work from home the first two, three hours of the day and then I'd go into the office later on. And I still would constantly have to remind people like I'm not able to take morning appointments so we can meet after 10 or 11 am. And a lot of pushback, a lot of pushback, a lot of like no, we can't do that. Or just people making comments like oh, it must be so nice to be able to come in late, it must be so nice that blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Nikita Williams:
Like, are you sure?
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
you're sick, the questioning whether or not. I was like I was trying to act like I was okay in trying to hide my pain and in hiding my pain. I was running into issues where people thought I wasn't sick, but you don't look sick. How many of us have heard that? So many times, we've all heard it. And so, yes, I did have pushback, but you know what? I had the law on my side, like I had the documentation on my side, I had every right to those accommodations and so that's what helped me to kind of manage those instances of ableist microaggressions. Yes, I have definitely struggled with that. I'm a lot more open with it now because now I'm an entrepreneur, so I get to set my schedule and my hours and I have more freedom in that sense. But even if I was working a nine to five, I feel like I've arrived at a point where I understand myself a lot more that I would be willing to say and advocate on myself and others because I'm more informed. But I know it's hard. There is a lot of shame, there is a lot of ableism and there's a lot of folks who just might not believe you if you have an invisible disability. But it's up to you to say something. If you don't say something then it's gonna continue to be stigmatized. So I kind of lean more on the side of being a little more vulnerable and saying something If it's gonna help myself and other folks out. But again, I know not everybody is comfortable doing that or even is in a space where they feel safe enough to do that. So just figure out what works for you and the spaces that you're at.
Nikita Williams:
This is part of the reason why I wanted to have you on the show, because we need more people like you and I, who have gone through some of these things and we know how you can find your terms of safety and the resources that you may need. In whatever place you are in your life whether it's in college, grad school, entrepreneurship, wherever working for the man, like whatever that might be you do have resources available to you, but it's amazing, you don't know it. Part of it is that safety of being like I will never forget. So many clients of mine in the past have been like working a full-time job, trying to do the side hustle and have you ask for accommodations, and they don't even know that that's a possibility. They don't even know that that's something that they can ask or can look into and talk to HR for. So I really appreciate you sharing that and also about the point that if you haven't done it, don't shame yourself for not doing it, because the fear of being shamed for asking for that is not like what everybody's like fear. What is that saying? They say fear appearing real or whatever. It's real, it's a real thing. It really does happen. So that fear is legitimate and it's like having some support around that, with people who can maybe support you through it or help you to see how it might be beneficial, is really useful.
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
Yes, it definitely helps to have someone that you can see as like a role model or someone who has done it or walked the walk or you name it. The more we have folks who are willing to kind of say something, then the more folks will learn about the fact that they have access to these options. And that's not again like there's like pros and cons to everything, because I've had so many people ask me should I disclose my disability when I'm applying to X?
Nikita Williams:
And I say that's a very personal decision.
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
Because one yes, legally they should not be discriminating against you, but two people will still do it.
Nikita Williams:
Yeah.
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
So it is a very personal decision. So, as I say, yes, you should learn about your rights, you should learn about accommodations, you should check out websites like Jan, the Job Accommodations Network, to even see, like what accommodations even look like, because some of these accommodations you're reading this stuff and you're like I had no idea that they could provide me with transcription software or I had no idea that I could do whatever it is Like there's so many different types of accommodations that exist out there that are actually like lawful and that you're entitled to. So, yes, definitely, kind of see what your options are and then, depending on your circumstances, what feels kind of comfortable for you to kind of get started.
Nikita Williams:
Yeah, I was gonna say do you have a resource or place besides Jan that you would recommend for people who want to educate themselves on what are my rights?
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
I'm not an expert on your rights, yeah.
Nikita Williams:
I just mean like disability law.
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
I'll say that because I primarily work with college students and graduate students and folks in the higher ed setting. I tell students to always check out the Disability Services Office or program Sometimes it's called Accessibility Services Office and see, learn more about their services. You can just pop in sometimes they have workshops and find out what type of support they provide and then, if you're an employee, to go to HR similarly the HR office they might have someone who is a liaison with the Disability Services Office or who works closely with folks who have disabilities or who require accommodations. They might have handouts, workshops, you name it. Get a hold of the person who's in charge of accommodations at HR and have a conversation with them. Usually these conversations are completely confidential, so they're not gonna be telling your supervisor about the conversation you had with them. Definitely start there. Start from there and see what you get from those conversations.
Nikita Williams:
I'm personally working on like gathering a list that I like to give to anyone who's like in the community, who's asking of different resources, programs or even coaches, and specifically who one have an understanding of what it's like to live with chronic illness and disabilities, visible or invisible, and have like a feeling like I can get the support I need with people who can have that compassion from a place of like I'm living there with you and also from a practical standpoint of like the legalities and lawyers and finding work, which is a really big challenge for those of us who aren't already and we're looking for work that accommodates where we currently are. There's a website called Chronically Capable that is a great resource for finding jobs that are working with specifically hiring people with chronic illnesses, visible or invisible. So I'll have some of those links in the show notes y'all so you can have access to that. But thank you so much for this. This was really really fun and really informative. I liked it.
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
Thank you. I feel like you really get me and I don't have a lot of experiences like that because you know, I'm sure you have a big network of chronic illness warriors. But in my space I find that, like I, you know, don't get to run into a lot of folks who do have chronic illnesses, and so it's just nice to be in this shared space with this familiarity of kind of even though our experiences are probably different, there's still some parallels and some overlaps too. So thank you so much for having me and it's been really nice, you know, having this conversation.
Nikita Williams:
Yeah, so how can people find you? Thank you so much for saying that, because I agree with you. This is part of the reason why I love doing this show. But how can people find you? Anything exciting happening with FemTor? Let us know.
Yvette Martinez-Vu:
So, yeah, if you want to learn more about me and what I do, you can check out my website, gradschoolfemtorringcom. That's F-E-M-T-O-R-I-M-G gradschoolfemtorringcom. I'm also gradschoolfemtorring on social media, so you can find me on Instagram, facebook, linkedin and Twitter and, in terms of exciting stuff, I am co-authoring a book called the Grad School Femtorring Guide, which is all about navigating successfully navigating the grad school admissions process. It's specifically for first generation, low-income, non-traditional students of color, and it's going to be coming out either end of 2023, early 2024 with the University of California Press. So I'm very excited about the book and, yeah, definitely listen to my podcast and check out my newsletter if you want to learn more about grad school, about personal development and about sustainable productivity. Yeah, I love that.
Nikita Williams:
Thank you so much. We'll have everything in the show notes. Y'all. That's a wrap. Y'all. Thanks for tuning in to Crafted to Thrive, the podcast that helps entrepreneurs with chronic illness to thrive and build a holistic business and life. Check out our website at CraftedToThrivecom for this episode of show notes and all the gifts and goodies. Connect with me on Instagram at Thrive with Nikita for more tips and behind the scenes and more Tap me to share what you loved about this episode and I'll feature you on an upcoming episode. So until next time, remember, yes, you are crafted to thrive.
Academic Coach, Author, Speaker
Dr. Yvette Martínez-Vu is a Chicana mother-scholar, academic coach, and host of the Grad School Femtoring Podcast where she empowers first-generation students of color as they navigate higher education. Dr. Martinez-Vu is the co-author of the forthcoming Grad School Femtoring Guide: Successfully Navigating Graduate School Applications with University of California Press, and co-editor of the best-selling Chicana M(other)work Anthology with University of Arizona Press. After working in higher education for over ten years, she transitioned out and relocated her little familia from California to Portugal.
Here are some great episodes to start with.