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Living With Brain Disease

Stroke, Neurodegeneration, and the Changing Mind

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Living With Brain Disease

By: Dr Elias Morton
Narrated by: Tess Stalker
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Summary

There is a particular kind of fear that arrives when the brain is involved. People can face heart disease, lung disease, kidney disease, and even cancer with a grim determination, but when the doctor begins to speak about the brain, something changes in the room. The atmosphere tightens. The future feels less predictable. The questions become more personal, more intimate, and often more frightening, because the brain is not only an organ that keeps us alive. It is the place where our sense of self seems to live. It holds our memories, our language, our personality, our judgement, our humour, our patience, our ability to plan, and our capacity to recognise the faces we love. When the brain is injured or begins to change, it can feel as if life itself is being rearranged from the inside out.

This audiobook is written for people living with brain disease, and for the families and friends who find themselves living with it too. It is written for the person who has had a stroke and now feels as if their body is unfamiliar. It is written for the partner who hears a loved one speak differently, hesitate over words, or lose the thread of a conversation, and wonders whether this is temporary or the beginning of something long-term. It is written for the adult child who notices slight changes in a parent’s mood, attention, or memory and feels a quiet dread they cannot easily name. It is written for the caregiver who is exhausted, guilty about feeling exhausted, and uncertain how to describe a life that has become both meaningful and unbearably heavy. It is also written for the person who has a diagnosis on paper but still feels unseen, because the world tends to recognise disability more readily when it is visible.

©2026 Deep Vision Media t/a Zentara UK (P)2026 Deep Vision Media t/a Zentara UK
Alzheimer's & Dementia Neuroscience & Neuropsychology Physical Illness & Disease Psychology Psychology & Mental Health Human Brain Heartfelt
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Most relevant

Listener received this title free

Anyone noticing changes in a parent’s mood, attention, or memory may find comfort here. The audiobook speaks directly to those fears with empathy and understanding.

Helpful for Adult Children of Aging Parents

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Listener received this title free

The author balances emotional honesty with useful perspective. It recognizes pain and uncertainty while still offering ways to cope and communicate more effectively.

Emotionally Honest and Practical

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Listener received this title free

"For anyone feeling like their body is 'unfamiliar' after a stroke, this is a must-listen. It’s a roadmap for the long road to adaptation.

Finding a new normal

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Listener received this title free

The tone throughout is calm and respectful. Even difficult topics are discussed in a way that feels manageable rather than overwhelming. That makes it easier to listen and absorb.

Clear, Calm, and Encouraging

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Listener received this title free

Partners of those with brain disease often experience confusion and grief too. I appreciated how the audiobook acknowledges their emotional journey as well.

Very Helpful for Partners

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