Malik & Aphasia: Podcast

I Rebuild My Speech One Simple Story At A Time

3 min · 29 mei 2026
aflevering I Rebuild My Speech One Simple Story At A Time artwork

Beschrijving

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2402019/fan_mail/new] Six years after a stroke, Malik is still doing the brave, unglamorous work of rebuilding his voice. You can hear the effort in every line and the determination underneath it: he practices speaking by recording himself, sharing his story, and reaching for clearer words one moment at a time. If you care about stroke recovery, aphasia support, or the day-to-day reality of speech therapy outside a clinic, this conversation lands with real honesty. We also talk about how recovery shows up in small decisions, not just big medical milestones. Malik gives everyday examples that double as speech practice: answering a question at an appointment, choosing “home” over “restaurant” because it feels healthier, and explaining what simple food looks like for him. The details matter, because they reveal a practical approach to healthy habits after stroke: keep choices clear, keep meals doable, and build routines you can repeat without stress. Then the story shifts to what happens when the “nice night out” does not feel so nice afterward. Malik describes leaving a beautiful restaurant feeling sick, and he shares a straightforward rule about alcohol moderation that helps him stay steady. It is a reminder to listen to your body, notice patterns, and set limits that support your health without shame. If Malik’s story resonates, subscribe, share this with someone who needs encouragement, and leave a review so more people can find it. What’s one small choice that has made a big difference in your health or recovery? Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/malikaphasiapodcast]

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Alle afleveringen

41 afleveringen

aflevering I Rebuild My Speech One Simple Story At A Time artwork

I Rebuild My Speech One Simple Story At A Time

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2402019/fan_mail/new] Six years after a stroke, Malik is still doing the brave, unglamorous work of rebuilding his voice. You can hear the effort in every line and the determination underneath it: he practices speaking by recording himself, sharing his story, and reaching for clearer words one moment at a time. If you care about stroke recovery, aphasia support, or the day-to-day reality of speech therapy outside a clinic, this conversation lands with real honesty. We also talk about how recovery shows up in small decisions, not just big medical milestones. Malik gives everyday examples that double as speech practice: answering a question at an appointment, choosing “home” over “restaurant” because it feels healthier, and explaining what simple food looks like for him. The details matter, because they reveal a practical approach to healthy habits after stroke: keep choices clear, keep meals doable, and build routines you can repeat without stress. Then the story shifts to what happens when the “nice night out” does not feel so nice afterward. Malik describes leaving a beautiful restaurant feeling sick, and he shares a straightforward rule about alcohol moderation that helps him stay steady. It is a reminder to listen to your body, notice patterns, and set limits that support your health without shame. If Malik’s story resonates, subscribe, share this with someone who needs encouragement, and leave a review so more people can find it. What’s one small choice that has made a big difference in your health or recovery? Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/malikaphasiapodcast]

29 mei 20263 min
aflevering Malik Shares How He Rebuilds Language Through Small Steps artwork

Malik Shares How He Rebuilds Language Through Small Steps

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2402019/fan_mail/new] We talk with Malik about living with aphasia after a stroke and the slow, daily work of practicing speech, reading, and writing. He shares travel memories, family loss, and faith, and he explains why he wants to create videos to support others with disability.  • living with a language disability that affects speaking, reading, and writing  • practicing clear thinking and sentence building  • a stroke history and the impact of aphasia  • using everyday tools and routines to practice hard words and communication  • memories of traveling from Karachi to Chicago and seeing snow at Christmas  • grief after losing family members and leaning on faith  • wanting to make supportive videos for aphasia and disability  Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/malikaphasiapodcast]

22 mei 20266 min
aflevering Malik Explains Why He Refuses To Rush Life artwork

Malik Explains Why He Refuses To Rush Life

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2402019/fan_mail/new] Malik opens with a plain introduction, then says something that lands hard: six years ago he had a stroke. What follows is a raw, human snapshot of stroke recovery and disability life, told in his own cadence as he practices recording and listening to himself. You can hear him working for clarity, repeating words, and staying with the thought until it comes out. That effort is the point, and it’s something a lot of survivors recognize instantly.  We stay with the themes that keep coming up for Malik: support, perseverance, and action. He asks to be listened to by disabled and non-disabled people alike, because real disability support is not pity, it’s patience and presence. He also talks about needing a supporting role from the people close to him, from a spouse to friends, because recovery doesn’t happen in isolation.  Then he flips the lens on the rest of us. He questions “rush life” and the nonstop running that leaves everyone tired, and he makes a case for slowing down as a form of strength. Peace, rest, and simple preferences become ways to reclaim control when your body and speech are rebuilding. If you’ve ever felt pressured to hurry through healing, this conversation will feel like permission to breathe.  If Malik’s words move you, subscribe, share this with someone who needs a slower day, and leave a review so more listeners can find stories like this. Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/malikaphasiapodcast]

15 mei 20263 min
aflevering Writing After Stroke artwork

Writing After Stroke

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2402019/fan_mail/new] Malik joins us with a clear goal: rebuild communication when speaking is hard. He shares what it feels like to live with a speech disability and memory loss, and why he returns to the basics of stroke recovery day after day. Instead of big promises or quick fixes, he talks about practice, patience, and the courage it takes to keep trying when words do not come easily. We dig into how writing can act like a bridge back to language. Malik explains his focus on reading and handwriting practice, the role of hand therapy after stroke, and why putting thoughts on paper helps him keep track of keywords and shape what he wants to say. He also calls out specific targets that matter in speech therapy and aphasia rehab, like finding verbs, building sentences, and strengthening the kind of predictive thinking that supports planning and clearer expression. One of the most memorable moments is his real-world “assignment”: going to a restaurant for the first time and using writing to describe what he tastes, whether food feels hot or cold, and how to turn those sensations into words. It’s a simple idea with a big takeaway for anyone navigating rehabilitation, caregiving, or cognitive therapy: everyday life can become the most meaningful practice room. If Malik’s story helps you, subscribe, share this with someone who needs encouragement, and leave a review. What daily moment would you turn into a writing exercise to strengthen your voice? Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/malikaphasiapodcast]

6 mei 20263 min
aflevering After The Stroke artwork

After The Stroke

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2402019/fan_mail/new] Memory can vanish in flashes, and when it does, it takes your confidence with it. We share a raw, minimal, deeply human account of stroke, confusion, and the scary moments that follow when your mind will not hold onto what just happened. The language is fragmented on purpose, because that is what memory loss after stroke can feel like from the inside.  We also touch the visceral reality of symptoms, from headache to seeing blood, and how those snapshots can loop in your head long after the crisis. From there, the story turns to communication: speaking, reading, writing, and the crushing “fail” moments that can come with aphasia after stroke. We sit with the repetition and the frustration, but we do not stop at the struggle. The throughline is determination: the wish to speak again, to be understood again, to feel like yourself again.  Books become a lifeline, and reading becomes more than a hobby. It is comfort, focus, and a reminder that the mind still reaches for meaning. We also make space for sadness and tears, because emotional recovery is part of stroke rehabilitation too. If you or someone you love is navigating stroke recovery, memory problems, or speech therapy, this short listen offers recognition and a reason to keep practicing the basics.  Subscribe for more real stories, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review with your experience: what helped you keep going when words were hard to find? Support the show [https://www.patreon.com/malikaphasiapodcast]

7 apr 20263 min