ALS -To the moon and back

Lisa Wright and Portia Turbo

Welcome to To the Moon and Back. I’m Lisa Wright, and with me is Portia Turbo — iconic Sydney drag queen, trivia queen, perfume oracle, and a bestie of almost 15 years. We met at one of her infamous trivia nights and have spent years wandering art galleries, laughing ourselves silly, and navigating life’s unexpected twists together. In this first episode, we talk honestly about friendship, joy, and my recent diagnosis of ALS — and what it means to face something big with humour, love, and the people who hold you up.

Episodes

  1. 12/28/2025

    ALS - To The Moon and Back - Episode 4

    ALS to the Moon and Back — Podcast Intro Recording’s in progress… and before we get into anything remotely sensible, Portia Turbo is over here singing “We wish you a Merry Christmas” and casually wishing everyone a “happy new gonorrhea”, which feels… on brand. I’m Lisa Wright — I live out at Mount Murray Farm in the Southern Highlands, I’ve got dogs that refuse to let anyone have a serious conversation uninterrupted, and I’ve recently found myself living in a world I never planned to be in: ALS. This podcast is us — me and Portia — having the conversations you don’t always get to hear. The ones that bounce from art and travel stories (Starry Night, Kandinsky, the Guggenheim, snow falling over Central Park… honestly, goosebumps) to the big stuff: grief, rage, bodies, systems, and what it’s like to suddenly have your life shaped by timelines you didn’t ask for. In this episode, we eventually stop waffling (no promises) and get into edavarone — or “a daravone”, depending on who’s reading the label — the infusion treatment I’m doing now. It’s a high-dose antioxidant, and the timing matters: 10 infusions in a 14-day window, then time off, then you do it again. It’s a bit of a logistical circus — early mornings, energy management, and the reality that ALS doesn’t make you “tired” in the normal way… it just makes resting feel very seductive. We also go wandering into the “juju” side of things — what trauma does to a body, what happens when you swallow your anger for decades, and how the nervous system flips into “rest and digest” when you finally learn how to properly drop into stillness. There’s a bit of dark humour (because otherwise… how?) and a bit of tenderness, and the occasional dog cameo. So if you’re here for real talk, big laughs in inappropriate places, and the honest mess of figuring out how to live well inside something hard — welcome. This is ALS to the Moon and Back. And if you’re enjoying it (and you’re not a one-star mongrel), please chuck us a five-star review. 💛 Support the show Thank you for listening to ALS - To the Moon and Back. If this episode resonated, please share it with someone who might need it. You can follow, subscribe, and stay connected as we continue exploring life, friendship, ALS, treatments, hope, and all the messy, meaningful bits in between. Take care of yourselves — and each other — and we’ll see you next episode.

    57 min
  2. 12/07/2025

    ALS - To The Moon and Back - Episode 2 Access Denied

    Access Denied In this episode of ALS to the Moon and Back, Portia and I get stuck into something pretty raw and, honestly, a bit outrageous — what actually happened when I was prescribed Edaravone and then couldn’t get it, even though it was on the PBS and everyone was telling me how “great” it was going to be. We talk about the quiet side of ALS/MND that doesn’t get spoken about much: the people who haven’t even told their families yet, the pressure to stay small and “not make a fuss”, and why I eventually decided I was not going to just quietly disappear while my treatment fell over around me. I walk through how I went from hopeful and optimistic with a new prescription… to being told I didn’t “fit the financial model”, to Mark spending weeks on the phone trying to find anyone who could actually deliver a federally funded drug to someone who lives two hours from Sydney. Spoiler: it took writing to the NSW Health Minister and ABC Illawarra before anything really shifted. We also rewind a bit: the early twitching and weakness,being treated like a hysterical woman while I knew something was really wrong,and then being told I had 24–36 months… just three weeks after my friend Mick died of the same disease.From there, we touch on what I’m doing to support myself now — things like the Wahls Protocol, supplements, integrative care, and working through long-held trauma in the body. None of it is presented as a cure or advice; it’s simply my way of trying to live well with this diagnosis and give my brain and body the best shot I can. We finish on something important: fasciculations (all that twitching) don’t neatly map to progression, timelines aren’t guarantees, and there is still room for quiet, stubborn optimism — even with a diagnosis like ALS. If you’re in Australia and having trouble accessing Edaravone or getting care close to home, ABC Illawarra want to hear from you. Their details are below. Jen Courtney - ABC Illawarra E: Courtney.Jennifer@abc.net.au  Ph: 02-4224-5011 or 0407-593967 Thank you for listening to ALS - To the Moon and Back. If this episode resonated, please share it with someone who might need it. You can follow, subscribe, and stay connected as we continue exploring life, friendship, ALS, treatments, hope, and all the messy, meaningful bits in between. Take care of yourselves — and each other — and we’ll see you next episode.

    44 min

About

Welcome to To the Moon and Back. I’m Lisa Wright, and with me is Portia Turbo — iconic Sydney drag queen, trivia queen, perfume oracle, and a bestie of almost 15 years. We met at one of her infamous trivia nights and have spent years wandering art galleries, laughing ourselves silly, and navigating life’s unexpected twists together. In this first episode, we talk honestly about friendship, joy, and my recent diagnosis of ALS — and what it means to face something big with humour, love, and the people who hold you up.