Patty's Place

Patty's Place

Stop Saying “Let Me Know If You Need Anything”-Interview with Kelly Edmundson

30 min · 20 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Stop Saying “Let Me Know If You Need Anything”-Interview with Kelly Edmundson

Descripción

I would love to hear from you. Send me questions or comments. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2461734/fan_mail/new] The funeral ends, the messages slow down, and suddenly the calendar becomes the hardest part of grief. We sit down with Kelly Edmondson, founder and CEO of Timely Presence, to talk about what support should look like after the sympathy flowers are gone and real life returns. As a former trauma nurse and now a certified grief counselor, Kelly brings both clinical experience and the honesty of living through profound loss as a bereaved mother. We get specific about the moments that sting: a loved one’s birthday, Mother’s Day, the holiday season, and the first anniversary of death. Kelly explains why “If you need anything, let me know” often fails, and what helps more: steady, practical presence that doesn’t ask the griever to manage everyone else’s discomfort. We also talk about grief brain and the hidden symptoms people don’t expect, from exhaustion and low motivation to forgetfulness and trouble focusing at work, especially when bereavement leave runs out long before you feel like yourself again. Kelly walks us through how Timely Presence supports someone through the first year with heirloom-quality memorial gifts delivered on key dates, including an engraved memory box, interactive wind chimes, a crystal votive candle holder, and a 3D photo crystal keepsake. We also explore creating new rituals, planning for triggers, and why even pet loss can feel like a “loud absence” after years of caregiving routines. Year-Long Sympathy & Memorial Gift Collections | Timely Presence [https://thetimelypresence.com/] If you’ve ever wanted to show up better for someone grieving, or you’re trying to navigate your own loss with more tenderness and less isolation, listen through and share this with a friend. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us what milestone date is hardest for you to face. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2461734/support]

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41 episodios

episode The Village Solution-Interview with author Carl Nassar artwork

The Village Solution-Interview with author Carl Nassar

I would love to hear from you. Send me questions or comments. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2461734/fan_mail/new] Loneliness doesn’t always look like being alone. Sometimes it looks like being a caregiver with a full calendar, a heavy heart, and nobody to hand the weight to. I sit down with psychotherapist and writer Carl Nassar, author of The Village Solution, to name the thing so many of us feel but struggle to explain: we’re exhausted because we’re living without the kind of village humans evolved to rely on. Carl walks us through how village life used to spread care, work, and emotional support across a whole community and how consumer culture quietly replaced that with isolation, striving, and the promise that the “right stuff” will bring our people near. We talk about why ads hit so hard, why achievement can become its own trap, and why even the hero’s journey makes more sense when the real ending is a return to belonging. We even bring in Winnie the Pooh and Christopher Robin as a surprisingly accurate map for building a community that accepts us the way we are. We also get practical about what to do when grief, trauma, or dementia caregiving makes you feel cut off. Carl shares what “village support” actually looks like today, from therapy and grief circles to intentionally showing up for a small group every week and letting care spill into real life. We close with two grounded tools you can start practicing right now: stillness and compassion, the qualities that make it safer to be honest and easier to be together. If this conversation helps you feel a little less alone, subscribe, share it with someone who needs a village, and leave a review so more caregivers and grievers can find Patty’s Place. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2461734/support]

3 de jun de 202634 min
episode Caregiver Support Is The Best Medicine-Interview with Dr. Warren Wong artwork

Caregiver Support Is The Best Medicine-Interview with Dr. Warren Wong

I would love to hear from you. Send me questions or comments. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2461734/fan_mail/new] We sit down with Dr. Warren Wong to rethink what dementia care should look like when the goal is love, dignity, and real quality of life for both the person living with memory loss and the caregiver. We share hard truths about emergencies, wandering, and burnout, plus practical ways to build trust and get meaningful support instead of trying to white knuckle it alone.  • Dr. Wong’s journey into geriatrics and the PACE model for keeping seniors in the community  • Why “call 911” can trigger hospitalization and loss of independence for frail older adults  • Cultural expectations and caregiver guilt that block families from asking for help  • Our personal story of refusal to test, crisis diagnosis, and the overwhelm of finding memory care  • Trust building, routine resistance, and the green light yellow light red light days  • Why showering can be terrifying and how to approach care with more safety  • Medicare GUIDE, caregiver training, respite options, and 24 7 dementia support  • Care navigation versus care coordination and why checklists are not enough  • Dementia villages, memory cafes, and social connection as part of care  • “Doing to” versus “doing for” versus “doing with” as a dignity framework  • Wandering risk and why the first 24 hours matter  Make sure you leave us a review or subscribe to our YouTube channel  Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2461734/support]

27 de may de 202640 min
episode Stop Saying “Let Me Know If You Need Anything”-Interview with Kelly Edmundson artwork

Stop Saying “Let Me Know If You Need Anything”-Interview with Kelly Edmundson

I would love to hear from you. Send me questions or comments. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2461734/fan_mail/new] The funeral ends, the messages slow down, and suddenly the calendar becomes the hardest part of grief. We sit down with Kelly Edmondson, founder and CEO of Timely Presence, to talk about what support should look like after the sympathy flowers are gone and real life returns. As a former trauma nurse and now a certified grief counselor, Kelly brings both clinical experience and the honesty of living through profound loss as a bereaved mother. We get specific about the moments that sting: a loved one’s birthday, Mother’s Day, the holiday season, and the first anniversary of death. Kelly explains why “If you need anything, let me know” often fails, and what helps more: steady, practical presence that doesn’t ask the griever to manage everyone else’s discomfort. We also talk about grief brain and the hidden symptoms people don’t expect, from exhaustion and low motivation to forgetfulness and trouble focusing at work, especially when bereavement leave runs out long before you feel like yourself again. Kelly walks us through how Timely Presence supports someone through the first year with heirloom-quality memorial gifts delivered on key dates, including an engraved memory box, interactive wind chimes, a crystal votive candle holder, and a 3D photo crystal keepsake. We also explore creating new rituals, planning for triggers, and why even pet loss can feel like a “loud absence” after years of caregiving routines. Year-Long Sympathy & Memorial Gift Collections | Timely Presence [https://thetimelypresence.com/] If you’ve ever wanted to show up better for someone grieving, or you’re trying to navigate your own loss with more tenderness and less isolation, listen through and share this with a friend. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us what milestone date is hardest for you to face. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2461734/support]

20 de may de 202630 min
episode What An End Of Life Doula Really Does For Families-Interview with Victoria Volk artwork

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I would love to hear from you. Send me questions or comments. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2461734/fan_mail/new] Grief gets treated like a single moment, but for caregivers it’s often a long, exhausting season. We sit down with Victoria Volk, certified grief specialist and creator of Grieving Voices, to talk about what actually helps when dementia caregiving, hospice decisions, and anticipatory grief collide. She explains what an end-of-life doula does, why hospice is often introduced too late, and how a supportive advocate can protect a patient’s wishes while easing pressure on the family.  We also dig into a definition of grief that reaches far beyond death: the loss of hopes, dreams, and expectations. That one shift changes how we understand caregiver burnout, anger, and the ways old losses can resurface when a new crisis hits. Victoria walks us through grief recovery as an evidence-based method for addressing emotional pain, including the hard truth that you can’t always get the apology you deserve, but you can still become emotionally complete.  Finally, we call out the grief myths many of us learned early, like “be strong,” “replace the loss,” and “time heals all wounds,” and we talk about boundaries that protect your energy without shutting people out. If you’re navigating hospice care, end-of-life planning, dementia, or the messy reality of grief in the body, this conversation offers practical language and real relief. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs it, and leave a review so more caregivers can find this support. https://theunleashedheart.com/ Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2461734/support]

13 de may de 202641 min
episode A Grief Doula Explains What Helps After Loss-Interview with Cindy Burns artwork

A Grief Doula Explains What Helps After Loss-Interview with Cindy Burns

I would love to hear from you. Send me questions or comments. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2461734/fan_mail/new] Grief can make the world feel smaller overnight, and widowhood can make you wonder who you even are without the person you built your days around. We’re joined by Cindy J. Burns, a grief coach, grief doula, and self-described widow coach, for an honest conversation about what helps when you’re tired of pretending you’re fine and you just want to breathe again. We talk through the difference between a death doula and a grief doula, including how support changes from anticipatory grief at end of life to the raw, lonely weeks after the loss. Cindy breaks down a powerful reframe: moving from living in grief, where grief colors every moment, to living with grief, where it stays with you but doesn’t control every hour. Along the way, we dig into the practical realities people don’t warn you about like eating alone in a restaurant, walking back into a house that feels wrong, sorting belongings at your own pace, and learning tasks your spouse used to handle, from finances to car maintenance. Cindy also gives permission to feel what you feel, including anger and even rage, and she shares simple ways to find micro-moments of joy without guilt. We close with gratitude as a daily practice, plus how to connect with Cindy at cindyjburns.com, including a free consult and her short quiz for widows to help pinpoint what’s keeping you stuck. If this conversation helps, please subscribe, share it with someone who needs steady support, and leave a review so more grieving caregivers, widows, and widowers can find Patty’s Place. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2461734/support]

7 de may de 202632 min