LIFE Beyond Aphasia

LIFE Aphasia Academy® Genevieve Richardson

Life Beyond Aphasia helps stroke survivors and care partners rebuild communication, confidence, and connection after formal rehab ends. Founded by Genevieve Richardson, M.S., CCC-SLP, this podcast bridges the gap between hospital discharge and living fully again. Viewers learn practical strategies to make progress at home, strengthen relationships, and feel like themselves again. Watch new episodes every week and start building your life beyond aphasia today. Learn more at https://www.dolifespeechpathology.com/ 

  1. 1 NGÀY TRƯỚC

    #167 You Can Rebuild Who You Are After a Stroke

    When stroke changes who you are and how you see yourself, recovery can’t stop at the physical. This episode explores how rebuilding identity together brings back meaning, purpose, and connection. Work with us. After stroke and aphasia, most families are told how to recover skills—not how to rebuild a life. In this conversation, Genevieve talks with Debra Meyerson and Steve Zuckerman, co-founders of Stroke Onward and authors of Identity Theft: Rediscovering Ourselves After Stroke and Aphasia. They share the story behind their book, their marriage, and their mission to help survivors and care partners rediscover who they are after everything changes. You’ll learn how identity work becomes the bridge between recovery and living well again. You’ll take away: • Why identity loss is often the hardest part of stroke recovery • How small, shared routines help rebuild confidence and belonging • What it means to move from “getting better” to “becoming whole”   For care partners and families rebuilding life after stroke: https://www.lifeaphasiaacademy.co/life-aphasia-collective https://strokeonward.org/ https://strokeonward.org/identity-theft-book/ https://circle.strokeonward.org/c/welcome https://strokeonward.org/gathering/ https://www.pbs.org/video/stroke-across-america-trauma-adaptation-purpose-oukojg/ https://secure.qgiv.com/for/strokeonward/event/scopmbcc-rao22c/ https://strokeonward.org/community/

    36 phút
  2. 9 THG 10

    #166 Why Do People Treat Survivors This Way?

    “I don’t always do this in public, because it’s exhausting—but I can, if you give me a minute.” If you've ever filled in the blank, answered for your partner, or just wanted to make life easier—you’re not alone. But there’s a hidden cost to helping too much. And for survivors with aphasia, that cost is steep: they start to believe they can’t. This episode is about the quiet way learned helplessness takes root in stroke recovery—and how we, as care partners and survivors, can stop reinforcing it without realizing. It’s not about blame. It’s about patterns. And the good news? Patterns can change. What learned helplessness really is—and how it quietly rewires a survivor’s brain • How care partners accidentally reinforce it (and how to stop) • Matt’s story: what happened when he paused, explained, and spoke up for himself • Why other people’s discomfort can make recovery harder • A simple mindset shift to help survivors reclaim dignity and participation    Survivor, do you want to take your life back? There’s a guide I want you to have. TAKE IT BACK: A Survivor’s Guide to Reclaiming Strength, Dignity, and Confidence After Stroke https://lifeaphasiaacademy.co/f/take-it-back Two aphasia caregivers take two different paths. Are you Lisa or Elena? https://lifeaphasiaacademy.co/lisa-or-elena Feel stuck in your recovery? This guide will remind you why progress is still possible: 3 Keys to LIFE Beyond Aphasia https://www.lifeaphasiaacademy.co/3-keys Aphasia spouses and caregivers, we have resources for you. https://lifeaphasiaacademy.co/care-partner-resources Explore speech pathology communication coaching options: https://www.dolifespeechpathology.com/treatment-for-aphasia-and-neurologic-conditions Learn more about our private support community for aphasia care partners: https://www.lifeaphasiaacademy.co/life-aphasia-collective Subscribe for new YouTube episodes: https://www.youtube.com/@LIFESpeechPathology/videos Listen to Listen for LIFE Aphasia podcast on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/listen-for-life-aphasia-podcast/id1621948384 Start small. Start here. Start with you.

    14 phút
  3. 2 THG 10

    #165 He Didn’t Give Up—This Is Learned Helplessness

    “He used to try... and now he just sits there.” Maybe you've said those words to yourself—or out loud to a friend. It’s one of the hardest parts of life after stroke, especially with aphasia. You're watching someone you love shrink. They used to fight. They used to care. Now they won’t even try. But what if what looks like apathy is actually something else? This episode unpacks a hidden truth: most stroke survivors haven’t given up. They’re just surviving. They’re stuck in the moment, unable to see how today’s effort connects to anything that still matters. Especially with aphasia, there’s no clear line between the task and the “why.” That’s where learned helplessness sneaks in. And that’s why your role as a care partner becomes so important—not to force effort, but to rebuild relevance. Key Takeaways: What learned helplessness really is—and why it’s not laziness • Why survivors need us to draw the connection between “effort” and “outcome” • How trauma and disorientation hide behind silence or compliance • The power of identity, relevance, and one person who believes in you • A better way to respond when you feel stuck, tired, or unheard If this hits home—there’s a guide I want you to have. TAKE IT BACK: A Survivor’s Guide to Reclaiming Strength, Dignity, and Confidence After Stroke   More Resources: Two aphasia caregivers and two different paths.  Are you Lisa or Elena? https://lifeaphasiaacademy.co/lisa-or-elena   Feel stuck in your recovery? This guide will remind you why progress is still possible: 3 Keys to LIFE Beyond Aphasia Aphasia spouses and caregivers, we have resources for  you.  https://lifeaphasiaacademy.co/care-partner-resources Explore speech pathology communication coaching options:  https://www.dolifespeechpathology.com/treatment-for-aphasia-and-neurologic-conditions Join our private support community for aphasia care partners:  LIFE Aphasia Collective Subscribe for new YouTube episodes: https://www.youtube.com/@LIFESpeechPathology/videos Listen to Listen for LIFE Aphasia podcast on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/listen-for-life-aphasia-podcast/id1621948384 🌱 You’re not failing. You’re adapting.

    18 phút
  4. 18 THG 9

    #163 Stop Helping the Wrong Way - The Three Moves That Actually Work

    “I thought I was helping. Turns out, I was shutting him down.” If that feels familiar—you’re not alone. Most care partners want to support, but the way we “help” can end up adding pressure instead of relief. In this episode, I share three evidence-based moves from Supported Conversation for Adults with Aphasia (SCA™) that cut through frustration and bring conversations back to connection. You’ll also hear Joey’s story—how he turned nightly dinner battles into a bridge for closeness.   These strategies aren’t about saying more. They’re about slowing down, supporting what’s already there, and making sure you both feel heard. And when practiced together, they rebuild trust that aphasia often erodes.     Key Takeaways • Why common “helping” behaviors backfire and increase frustration • The 3 conversation moves that build trust instead of tension • Joey’s story: how one dinner-table shift changed everything • Why you need all three moves together—not just one at a time • How to pick one recurring “big rock” or “little rock” situation to start practicing     If this hits home—there’s a guide I want you to have.https://care-partner-compass.lovable.app/     More Resources:   Speak up for yourself after stroke—Take It Back: https://lifeaphasiaacademy.co/f/take-it-back   Feel stuck? This will remind you why progress is still possible: https://dolifespeechpathology.com/f/neuroplasticity   Care partner resources: https://lifeaphasiaacademy.co/care-partner-resources    Explore therapy options: https://dolifespeechpathology.com    Subscribe for new episodes: https://www.youtube.com/@LIFESpeechPathology/videos  Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/listen-for-life-aphasia-podcast/id1621948384     Start small. Start here. Start with you.

    15 phút
  5. 11 THG 9

    #162 Why Belief is the First Step in Aphasia Recovery

    “He sat in the meeting with more experience than anyone else in the room—yet he stayed silent and let others speak for him.” That silence didn’t just happen at work. It followed Kevin home, where the shame and frustration of aphasia turned his marriage into a roommate arrangement. He had done every worksheet, every drill, and still asked himself: “Is this it for me?” If you’ve ever wondered the same, Kevin’s story will remind you: recovery doesn’t stop when therapy ends. Neuroplasticity—the brain’s ability to rewire—doesn’t expire at six months or a year. But it only comes alive when belief meets structure. Key takeaways: • The hidden difference between spontaneous recovery and dependent recovery • Why worksheets can improve skills in therapy but not real life • How belief acts as the ignition for neuroplasticity • The small repeatable frameworks Kevin used to rebuild work, marriage, and identity • Why it’s never “too late” to start again Kevin learned the hard way that therapy progress doesn’t always carry over into real life. That’s why I put together a free guide called 3 Keys to Life Beyond Aphasia. It’s not another worksheet list. It’s the exact steps that helped Kevin bring progress home — into work, into marriage, into everyday life. If you’ve ever wondered how to bridge that gap, this guide is for you. Grab your copy of 3 Keys to LIFE Beyond Aphasia https://www.lifeaphasiaacademy.co/3-key-reasons-aphasia-progress-never-stops

    17 phút
  6. 4 THG 9

    #161 Aphasia Caregiving and the Hidden Guilt Spiral

    She looked angry. He pulled back. Later, he realized—it wasn’t anger at all. It was aphasia. If you’ve ever replayed a hard moment thinking, “I should’ve been more patient, I should know what to say by now”—this episode is for you. The guilt spiral is real. But what if the story you’re telling yourself isn’t the real one? Why guilt and self-blame show up so quickly in caregiving The hidden difference between acting as “the judge” vs. “the detective” How the ACE filter (Aphasia, Cognition, Emotion) changes everything Why understanding your partner’s aphasia and cognition is essential to breaking free of the spiral A gentle reframe: mistakes aren’t failures—they’re clues If this hits home, take the free Care Partner Compass. It shows you where you are right now and points to what can actually make communication and connection feel lighter. https://lifeaphasiaacademy.co/f/care-partner-compass More Resources: “Are you Lisa or Elena? https://lifeaphasiaacademy.co/f/lisa-or-elena” “Speak up for yourself after stroke—Take It Back: https://lifeaphasiaacademy.co/f/take-it-back” “Feel stuck? This will remind you why progress is still possible: https://dolifespeechpathology.com/f/neuroplasticity” “Care partner resources: https://lifeaphasiaacademy.co/care-partner-resources” “Explore therapy options: https://dolifespeechpathology.com” “Join our private support community: https://dolifespeechpathology.co/collective” “Subscribe for new episodes: https://www.youtube.com/@LIFESpeechPathology/videos” “Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/listen-for-life-aphasia-podcast/id1621948384” You’re not failing. You’re learning the new rules.

    14 phút
  7. 28 THG 8

    #160 The Weirdest Aphasia Myths That Break Couples

    He asked what’s for dinner. She saw his blank stare, thought he was angry, and pulled away. But it wasn’t anger at all. We don’t talk about this enough—the way aphasia and stroke can twist how care partners interpret every look, every sigh, every silence. You end up carrying blame that was never yours. That’s why I teach the ACE Filter: Aphasia, Cognition, Emotion. It’s a way to stop, pause, and ask what’s really happening before you react. Here’s what you’ll learn in this episode: • Why misreading “Resting B-Face” is one of the most painful hidden traps for care partners • How the ACE Filter (Aphasia, Cognition, Emotion) helps you play detective instead of taking it personally • The Facebook myth I see over and over: “They’re always angry at me” • A simple way to shift from blame to clarity in the hardest everyday moments If this landed for you, try the Care Partner Compass. It’s free, it gives you clarity about your strengths and struggles, and it helps you see where to focus for better connection. The link’s below. More Resources: Care Partner Compass: https://care-partner-strength-wheel.lovable.app/ Speak up for yourself after stroke—Take It Back: https://lifeaphasiaacademy.co/f/take-it-back  Feel stuck? This will remind you why progress is still possible: https://dolifespeechpathology.com/f/neuroplasticity  Explore therapy options: https://dolifespeechpathology.com  Join our private support community: https://dolifespeechpathology.co/collective  Subscribe for new episodes: https://www.youtube.com/@LIFESpeechPathology/videos  Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/listen-for-life-aphasia-podcast/id1621948384 Start small. Start here. Start with you.

    9 phút

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Life Beyond Aphasia helps stroke survivors and care partners rebuild communication, confidence, and connection after formal rehab ends. Founded by Genevieve Richardson, M.S., CCC-SLP, this podcast bridges the gap between hospital discharge and living fully again. Viewers learn practical strategies to make progress at home, strengthen relationships, and feel like themselves again. Watch new episodes every week and start building your life beyond aphasia today. Learn more at https://www.dolifespeechpathology.com/ 

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