What stood out most to me was the performer’s wit and clarity—she doesn’t just talk about living with MS, she reclaims the narrative with humor, vulnerability, and deep purpose.
What I didn't like
N/A
My overall impression
Me, Myself, and Other” is a moving, sharply funny, and refreshingly honest solo performance that skillfully subverts tropes around disability and identity. By weaving together personal history, cultural complexity, and her diagnosis, she challenges the audience to rethink their assumptions about resilience and otherness. It’s not just a story of surviving, but of powerfully and unapologetically living.