BrainStorm
Subscribe on your favorite player
Listen on Apple Podcasts Listen on Spotify Listen on Stitcher Listen on Google PodcastsMuffy Walker, Author of "Memory Weavers"

Muffy Walker, Author of "Memory Weavers"
In this episode of BrainStorm by UsAgainstAlzheimer's Muffy Walker, a psychiatric nurse, founder of the International Bipolar Foundation, and author of the novel "Memory Weavers" discusses how her personal experiences caring for family members with both Alzheimer's disease and mental illness inspired her advocacy work. Her novel explores experiences of one person with Alzheimer's who loses memories and another with PTSD who can't escape traumatic memories. The conversation with host Meryl Comer delves into the persistent stigma surrounding both conditions, the challenges of caregiving, advances in early diagnosis through genetic testing, and intergenerational trauma impacts.
Walker highlights the importance of social connection in preventing cognitive decline and the isolation many caregivers experience as well as the valuable resources now available to patients and caregivers that weren't accessible when her mother was diagnosed 23 years ago. This is a must listen episode!
BrainStorm wants to hear from you! Send us a text.

About This Episode
In this episode of BrainStorm by UsAgainstAlzheimer's Muffy Walker, a psychiatric nurse, founder of the International Bipolar Foundation, and author of the novel "Memory Weavers" discusses how her personal experiences caring for family members with both Alzheimer's disease and mental illness inspired her advocacy work. Her novel explores experiences of one person with Alzheimer's who loses memories and another with PTSD who can't escape traumatic memories. The conversation with host Meryl Comer delves into the persistent stigma surrounding both conditions, the challenges of caregiving, advances in early diagnosis through genetic testing, and intergenerational trauma impacts.
Walker highlights the importance of social connection in preventing cognitive decline and the isolation many caregivers experience as well as the valuable resources now available to patients and caregivers that weren't accessible when her mother was diagnosed 23 years ago. This is a must listen episode!