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This Ability Podcast

This Ability Podcast

Written by: Mary Elizabeth
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About this listen

”This Ability Podcast” is a platform for individuals with disabilities, their family members, friends, and caregivers to talk about everyday life. Based in Carencro, LA this podcast is meant to inspire and enlighten others in the special needs community.

© 2026 This Ability Podcast
Parenting Relationships Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Balancing It All: Nursing, Motherhood & Living with Sickle Cell: An Interview with Sierra Stevens
    Feb 17 2026

    In this heartfelt and powerful episode of This Ability Podcast, Sierra Stevens shares her journey as a nurse, a mother of two children with diagnoses, and a woman living with sickle cell disease. Sierra opens up about raising her autistic, non-speaking son Micah and her daughter with ADD, navigating early diagnoses, embracing observation as a parenting tool, and learning to celebrate her children for exactly who they are. She speaks candidly about advocacy in schools, the importance of organizations like Families Helping Families, and how connecting with other parents transformed her sense of isolation into empowerment.

    Sierra also discusses her own health journey with sickle cell disease, including a recent battle with sickle cell retinopathy and retinal detachment surgeries. With honesty and strength, she reflects on balancing motherhood, marriage, nursing, and board leadership while prioritizing her health and her family’s safety. From elopement prevention and practical safety tools to the healing power of exercise, music, faith, and community, this episode is a reminder that resilience is built one intentional step at a time—and that no parent should walk this path alone.

    Support the show

    Thanks for listening to This Ability Podcast. If you are enjoying our podcast, be sure to like us on Facebook at This Ability Podcast page and subscribe to our YouTube channel.


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    25 mins
  • Cajun Roots, Chronic Illness, and Campus Advocacy with Josephine Faulk
    Feb 2 2026

    In this episode of This Ability Podcast, Mary sits down with Jo Faulk, a disabled student leader, advocate, and future educator whose lived experience has shaped her understanding of disability, resilience, and voice. Jo reflects on growing up with disability, the influence of her mother’s disability on her own journey, and why advocacy often becomes an “inherent skill” for disabled people. From navigating early self-advocacy to managing the emotional labor that comes with speaking up, Jo offers an honest look at what it means to advocate for yourself while also standing alongside a broader disability community.

    The conversation also dives into education, leadership, and systemic change. As a history student pursuing teaching certification and the president of her college’s disabled student organization, Jo shares her perspective on where the education system continues to fail disabled students—and how it can be reimagined with disabled voices at the center. She discusses campus advocacy, intersectionality across disability, gender, religion, and society, and what she hopes the disability rights movement prioritizes in the coming decade. This episode is a powerful reminder that disabled students are not just navigating systems—they are actively shaping the future of them.

    Support the show

    Thanks for listening to This Ability Podcast. If you are enjoying our podcast, be sure to like us on Facebook at This Ability Podcast page and subscribe to our YouTube channel.


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    39 mins
  • One in a Million: Blakelee’s Journey with Rare Disease and Resilience
    Jan 19 2026

    In this episode of This Ability Podcast, host Mary Baudoin sits down with Latasha Holt, a mother, educator, and advocate in Acadiana, to share her family’s journey navigating an ultra-rare medical diagnosis. Latasha opens up about her daughter, Blakelee, who is living with isolated (central) adrenal insufficiency—an exceptionally rare condition affecting approximately one in one million individuals—alongside epilepsy. Together, they break down what this diagnosis means medically, how it differs from more commonly known adrenal disorders, and the challenges of receiving answers when no clear triggering event is present.

    Latasha also offers an honest look into daily life managing complex medical needs, from medication routines and emergency preparedness to the emotional and psychological realities faced by both parent and child. She reflects on Blakelee’s perspective, the importance of building strong support systems, and the role of advocacy in raising awareness for rare diseases. This conversation highlights resilience, preparedness, and hope—while providing encouragement and practical insight for families navigating similar journeys and for listeners seeking to better understand the lived experience behind rare medical conditions.

    Support the show

    Thanks for listening to This Ability Podcast. If you are enjoying our podcast, be sure to like us on Facebook at This Ability Podcast page and subscribe to our YouTube channel.


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    40 mins
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