The Other Side of the Stroke — John’s Story, Part 2
John Church is back, and this time we go even deeper.
In Part 2 of his conversation with Billy, John picks up where he left off — moving from the raw chaos of the early days into the long, slow, unglamorous grind of years of caregiving. The part nobody puts on a highlight reel. The part that tests everything.
John talks about learning to communicate with Kristen when she had no words — the progressive, painstaking process of going from nods to yes and no, from yes and no to broken phrases, from broken phrases to something that finally started to resemble conversation. He opens up about finishing her sentences — a habit he developed out of love and desperation — and the moment speech therapists pulled him aside and told him to stop. That he had to let her struggle. Let her sit in the frustration. Because that was the only way she was going to get better. He did it. Even though it was hard to watch.
He describes the night Kristen walked the runway again at New York Fashion Week — this time in a hockey helmet, guided by a coordinator — and how that moment felt not like pity but like pure triumph. And he shares the story of Kristen’s first photo shoot after the stroke, in Asheville, North Carolina, when she looked at Billy and said: I’m back, bitches. Because that is exactly who she is.
John also addresses what nobody warned them about — the schizoaffective disorder diagnosis. Starting with minor, almost explainable things in the summer of 2024, and escalating to full hospitalization by December. John describes what it felt like to watch the person he loves be visibly terrified of things that weren’t real, calling the police on herself out of fear, and how completely unprepared he felt — again — for something he never saw coming. He talks about the responsibility of being the person she trusted to tell her what was real and what wasn’t, and how he learned to be direct and caring at the same time without playing into the delusions.
He talks about the marriage. About moments of feeling cheated. About watching other couples laugh and communicate easily and feeling the sting of that. About the days he needed a break and had to ask family to step in so he could breathe. And about why he would not have it any other way.
John’s final message to caregivers is simple, honest, and exactly what people in the thick of it need to hear: take your time, get educated, talk to someone, and don’t suffer in silence. Because if two people end up needing to be taken care of, nobody wins.
And yes — he confirms it. Sometimes all it takes is a hug.
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