A Contagious Smile Podcast

Five Hard Truths About Caregiving Rights And Advocacy

45 min · 1. Juni 2026
Episode Five Hard Truths About Caregiving Rights And Advocacy Cover

Beschreibung

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2071161/fan_mail/new] “HIPAA” gets blamed for everything, families get shut out, and a loved one in crisis gets reduced to a label and a sedative. We’re not doing that. Michael Makniak and Victoria Cure unpack the real-world misconceptions that derail caregiving and fiduciary decision-making, especially when mental illness shows up as episodes, psychosis, and emergency room chaos. We talk about why mental health treatment cannot be treated like “any other illness” and why medication can take weeks or months to dial in. Then we get practical: how to advocate when your loved one is not at baseline, why evaluations done under heavy sedation can mislead, and what to say to clinicians so they actually hear you. We also untangle HIPAA myths and share an easy script you can use on the phone when a hospital won’t confirm or deny anything but still needs critical history, allergies, and context. On the legal side, we clarify what guardianship and conservatorship mean in different states, how person versus estate authority works, and why “having power” rarely equals “forcing compliance”. We also address a hard truth families bump into: a lawyer’s ethical duty is to represent what the client wants, even when the family is convinced it’s not in the client’s best interest. The thread through all of it is least restrictive support, better documentation, and calmer leverage instead of louder conflict. If you’re a caregiver, advocate, or provider, you’ll leave with concrete tools you can use today, plus resources through Care Coalition and our Mental Health Resource Network. Subscribe, share this with someone who keeps hitting the HIPAA wall, and leave a review with your biggest question so we can tackle it next. Support the show [https://gofund.me/01c59071]

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400 Folgen

Episode Amir Arison: The Kind of Human the World Needs More Of Cover

Amir Arison: The Kind of Human the World Needs More Of

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2071161/fan_mail/new] A kid who has endured more surgeries than most adults can fathom sits beside a mother who refuses to let trauma be the last word. Then our guest, an actor best known for his work on The Blacklist, steps in with a mix of warmth, honesty, and wildly curious detours that somehow land exactly where they need to: on resilience, meaning, and the small choices that keep you alive. We talk about Faith’s tattoos as a living record of survival, how adoption became a deliberate break from domestic violence, and why “choose your destiny” is not a slogan but a hard-earned practice. The conversation goes deep into domestic violence recovery, chronic medical complexity, caregiving, disability, and the unseen cost of always being the strong one. If you’ve ever felt like you’re running on fumes while still showing up for everyone else, you’ll hear yourself in this. Our guest shares what it really takes to build a long acting career, why landing a series regular role can feel like stacked miracles, and how leaving The Blacklist for a Broadway lead reshaped his view of purpose and success. We also explore the science of faith and meditation, the “faith muscle” in the brain, and the idea that luck can be created through preparation, mindset, and persistence. We end with a challenge that hits home: find one small, selfish-in-a-healthy-way pleasure that keeps your devotion sustainable. If this moved you, subscribe, share it with someone who needs a flicker of hope, and leave a review telling us what helped you survive your worst days. Support the show [https://gofund.me/01c59071]

Gestern1 h 3 min
Episode Amir Arison Beyond The Blacklist: Why Faith's Poetry Touched His Heart Cover

Amir Arison Beyond The Blacklist: Why Faith's Poetry Touched His Heart

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2071161/fan_mail/new] A few lines of poetry can hit harder than a whole hour of advice, and that’s exactly how we choose to end this one. We wrap up by reading a poem from Faith Cure Solomon that puts a mother-daughter relationship into plain, vivid words: shared humour, shared pain, and a love that doesn’t disappear when life gets messy. If you’re drawn to spoken word, emotional storytelling, and real family bonds, this closing is built to stay with you.  Faith’s poem moves from warmth to truth without flinching. She talks about being “like my mother… to the core,” about the highs and lows, and about the kind of support that shows up day after day. The message isn’t perfect-family fantasy. It’s loyalty, resilience, and the quiet power of knowing someone is there “every step of the way.” Along the way, we reflect on what makes a bond strong: presence, admiration, and the decision to have each other’s backs when it counts.  We also take a moment to thank Amir for coming on and sharing time with us, because community is part of the story too. This is a short listen, but it’s packed with heart and it’s an easy share for anyone who loves their mum, misses their mum, or is still figuring out what family means. If it moves you, subscribe, share the episode with someone you ride for, and leave a review telling us the line that hit you most. Support the show [https://gofund.me/01c59071]

Gestern2 min
Episode Care Coalition Caregiving Guests of Kellan Fluckinger Cover

Care Coalition Caregiving Guests of Kellan Fluckinger

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2071161/fan_mail/new] When you’re trying to keep a loved one safe, get the right diagnosis, or survive a crisis, the healthcare system can feel less like support and more like a test you did not study for. We sit down with attorney and systems advocate Michael Magniak and domestic violence advocate and therapist Victoria Cure to talk about what gets lost between insurance rules, rushed appointments, and the real lives happening outside the exam room. We keep coming back to one sharp idea: people deserve dignity, and care should not depend on your ability to fight through red tape on your worst day.  We dig into why modern care can default to quick fixes, including how medication gets used as a band-aid when grief, trauma, and situational stress are not properly heard. Victoria explains what frontline advocacy looks like in courtrooms, clinics, and family systems, and why “take an extra minute and listen” is not a slogan but a practical intervention. Michael shares what it takes to “bust up systems” at the policy level, how institutional culture has shifted over the last 25 years, and why teaching families and providers to collaborate can change outcomes.  You also get hands-on tools for self-advocacy and caregiving, including how to build a care binder style snapshot that saves time, reduces errors, and helps specialists actually see the whole person. We introduce the Care Coalition journal, built for caregivers, patients, case managers, therapists, and providers who need a clear care navigation system in one place. If you care about patient advocacy, mental health resources, caregiving support, and better healthcare communication, this conversation gives you a grounded starting point.  Subscribe, share this with a caregiver who needs relief, and leave a review with one thing you wish every provider asked you at the start of an appointment. Support the show [https://gofund.me/01c59071]

9. Juni 202651 min
Episode A Medium Names The Missing Hand Cover

A Medium Names The Missing Hand

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2071161/fan_mail/new] She said one word that changed the whole room: hands. Danielle Worthing Columber had never met Victoria before, didn’t know her history, and was doing a true cold read when that detail landed and the camera revealed an amputation. What follows is not a polished performance. It’s a raw, human conversation about validation, grief, and what it feels like when someone names the thing you’ve been carrying silently.  We talk with Danielle, an LCSW trauma therapist and founder of Willow Medella Wellness, and her husband Ganange Mishapeshu, an intuitive medium with deep respect for ancestral teachings and practical reality. Together, we explore how mediumship and trauma-informed care can coexist: pacing, consent, and telling the truth without pushing someone into shock. Victoria shares an unforgettable story from the operating room, where she had to grieve the loss of a hand that held her daughter through hospital stays and held her grandparents at the end of their lives.  The conversation expands into special needs parenting, long-term medical trauma, and the kind of dark humor that keeps a family standing when life gets heavy. We also unpack an “age 22” message that’s framed as growth and building, not fear, plus the question of how signs from loved ones (and pets) show up in everyday life. We end with a practical takeaway for creators and helpers: make your work accessible, from audiobooks to inclusive formats, so more people can actually receive the support you’re trying to give.  If this moved you, subscribe, share it with someone who’s grieving, and leave a review so more listeners can find it. What part hit you the hardest? Support the show [https://gofund.me/01c59071]

8. Juni 20261 h 12 min
Episode What A Roast Reveals About How We See Ourselves Cover

What A Roast Reveals About How We See Ourselves

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2071161/fan_mail/new] You’re getting a front-row seat to a special kind of family chaos: we hand the mic to the crew, announce a roast of Michael, and let the night spiral in the funniest way possible. What starts as trip talk and a Stranger Things tour recap turns into a rapid-fire comedy session where nobody is safe, everyone talks over each other, and the jokes land like popcorn. If you love an unfiltered family comedy podcast energy, this is the one that sounds like real life, just louder.  But under the roasting, there’s real relationship stuff we can’t ignore. We talk about a weight loss journey, the weird push and pull of body image and body dysphoria, and that vulnerable moment when you try something on and want your partner to actually see you. The “dress reveal” story becomes a surprisingly relatable conversation about validation, timing, and why good intentions sometimes miss the mark. Yes, there’s also a donut debate, because apparently food and feelings always travel together.  Then we take a hard left into the anything-goes segments: warnings about what not to Google, messy stories that should never be told at a restaurant table, word and pronunciation games, and assigning “theme songs” while Alexa tries to take over. We also shout out Pride Month and make it clear where we stand on LGBTQ support: we don’t care who you love as long as you’re treated right.  If you want a funny podcast episode that mixes roasting, marriage banter, body confidence, and pure derailment, press play now. Subscribe, share it with the friend who lives for group chat energy, and leave a review. What line made you laugh the hardest? Support the show [https://gofund.me/01c59071]

8. Juni 202646 min