24 episodes

We all want to know if we’re normal—do I have enough friends? Should it take me this long to get over my ex? Should I move or stay where I am? Endlessly curious data journalist Mona Chalabi NEEDS to know, and she’s ready to dive into the numbers to get some answers. But studies and spreadsheets don’t tell the whole story, so she’s consulting experts, strangers, and even her mum to fill in the gaps. The answers might surprise you, and make you ask: does normal even exist? Am I Normal? with Mona Chalabi is produced in partnership with Transmitter Media.

Am I Normal? with Mona Chalabi TED Audio Collective

    • Society & Culture
    • 4.8 • 46 Ratings

Listen on Apple Podcasts
Requires subscription and macOS 11.4 or higher

We all want to know if we’re normal—do I have enough friends? Should it take me this long to get over my ex? Should I move or stay where I am? Endlessly curious data journalist Mona Chalabi NEEDS to know, and she’s ready to dive into the numbers to get some answers. But studies and spreadsheets don’t tell the whole story, so she’s consulting experts, strangers, and even her mum to fill in the gaps. The answers might surprise you, and make you ask: does normal even exist? Am I Normal? with Mona Chalabi is produced in partnership with Transmitter Media.

Listen on Apple Podcasts
Requires subscription and macOS 11.4 or higher

    Together for 20 years — but living apart?

    Together for 20 years — but living apart?

    The binary category of single/married doesn't allow for much nuance. What if, say, you’re in a long term committed relationship like a marriage — but you live apart? In the last episode of this mini series, Saleem talks to a couple who’s been living apart together ("LAT") for years about what motivates them to be in a LAT relationship, and how the arrangement works for them. 

    • 22 min
    What it's like to find your birth parent

    What it's like to find your birth parent

    In Britain, one-fourth of people who were adopted make contact with their birth parents before they turn 18. In this episode, Saleem meets Amanda, a Dominican woman who was adopted by a white couple in Connecticut. Amanda always knew she was adopted and was curious about her birth parents. After a few years of dead ends, she finally finds her biological mother … in the last place she expected.

    • 20 min
    Lessons from the happiest place in the world

    Lessons from the happiest place in the world

    For multiple years in a row, Gallup has named Finland the happiest country in the world. But can you actually measure happiness — and what do the Finns know that the rest of the world doesn’t? Before you move to Finland, we talk to a Finnish “happyologist” about how she defines happiness, what we can learn from even trying to quantify something so subjective, and why happiness might be less of an individual pursuit than you think.

    • 22 min
    Should kids have more freedom?

    Should kids have more freedom?

    Would you let your child run errands unaccompanied? Saleem investigates what this kind of early age autonomy can teach us about community, resilience, and family. Saleem talks to a Japanese mother who has lived in the U.S. & Japan about how she and her family navigate independence. Then he hears from one special on-the-ground expert about the value of doing things on one’s own.

    • 23 min
    What it’s like to live at home with your parents as an adult

    What it’s like to live at home with your parents as an adult

    In the U.S. living with your parents can be seen as a “bad” thing. But across the world, living with your parents is common – and even preferable to living by yourself. In the first episode of a special series of Am I Normal, Saleem Reshamwala talks to a 28-year-old teacher from Hong Kong about what it’s like to be growing into adulthood in her childhood home.

    • 20 min
    Introducing Body Electric

    Introducing Body Electric

    Am I Normal will be back this week! Until then, we’ve got a special 6-part series with an interactive twist coming your way: On Body Electric, TED Radio Hour host Manoush Zomorodi investigates the relationship between our bodies and our technology…and she has a challenge for YOU. Starts TOMORROW Tuesday, October 3rd.

    • 2 min

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5
46 Ratings

46 Ratings

LilyLovesLamp ,

Really dig the podcast, wish it went a little deeper some episodes

I think the premise of the podcast is just fantastic, and Mona is an incredible host (I’ve been following her work for some time, and this is yet another great addition!). I understand that there’s a time limit and a narrative to communicate (which ironically is usually that there are multiple perspectives), I wish it had more context. As someone with health research training I notice gaps that people without that background probably wouldn’t notice, and I’m sure it’s the same way for other folks who listen to the podcast with different expertise. All in all I’m still a dedicated listener!

ZoëReviews ,

Disappointed

I was ready to love this podcast but it didn’t work for me as someone with a background in anthropology. No disrespect meant but the research was all from one source that doesn’t fit as well in a contemporary landscape where people have thousands of “friends” online but only a handful they interact with in person.

Since the only other person the host talks to about this is her elderly mother, it would have been interesting for her to address the issue of chronic loneliness for that age group in the UK, as almost a quarter of people aged 75 and over go days without any human contact/conversation (200,000 go a month without any contact at all).

As a millennial herself, it also would have been cool if Chalabi talked about the generational differences, like the prepandemic survey where 22% of millennials said they had no friends at all, with 30% saying they always/often feel lonely. The insight at the end that we need different friends for different reasons isn’t wrong but wasn’t very satisfying either.

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