Lisa Skinner covers the struggles that caregivers face when caring for a loved one with Alzheimer’s disease. Lisa speaks with Betsy Wurzel about her experience as the primary caregiver for her husband following his diagnosis of early-onset Alzheimer’s disease at a relatively young…
Tapping is a program in which you use your fingertips and tap on many places on your face, collarbone, and under your arm. It is a simple procedure and it has been proven it works. Speaking briefly on tests done on cortisol levels.…
Becky discusses how the CAN card is being rebranded to the Autism Travel Club and Card to have further outreach to help families. The tagline is, “Putting Autism On The Map.” Becky and her team are making a huge difference to help families…
With one in every 44 kids with autism in the US and 26% of US adult’s having a disability, we (and Congress) need to step up…and stop distracting ourselves with the culture wars!
Lesli discusses the importance of pre-marital counseling, the difficulties that a marriage can have when partners don’t communicate, know tools to negotiate during a disagreement, and how sacrificing and comprising can bring resentment towards a partner.
The conversation highlights actor Bruce Willis’ diagnosis with FTD including how the diagnosis was covered in the news. Lisa elucidates for listeners how this rarer form of brain disease impacts a patient’s ability to communicate and causes behavioral changes.
She was assaulted in 2015 and to this day is having depression and PTSD. The assault happened in the patient’s room.
Alicia and Betsy discuss her book and the common thread among the different writer’s stories of feeling different, sensitive, feeling uncomfortable, and having intuitions that can’t be explained!
Lillian Cauldwell spoke from her personal experiences of what she experienced in the workplace and how she noticed the difference in behaviors between male and female workers. Plus the Queen Bee Syndrome
Meanwhile, studies have found trigger warnings are threatening college students’ mental health. Enough is enough. This sets a bad precedent; art is neither responsible for kids’ good nor bad behavior: THEY are!

