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Spared

A Memoir of Risk and Resolve

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Spared

By: Lori Jones
Narrated by: Lori Jones
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About this listen

Memoirs celebrate human resilience. We applaud those who struggle through insurmountable difficulties and surface on the other side, but will any amount of moxie, gumption, or pulling yourself up by bootstraps escape a mutated strand of double helix? Spared: A Memoir of Risk and Resolve follows the account of a young girl who witnesses her father’s descent into the psychological and physical deterioration of Huntington’s Disease (HD), a hereditary, neurological, degenerative illness which has minimal treatments and no cure. The author grows up in a household of uncertainty, secrecy, and shame, and by overhearing the adults speak, she gains limited understanding and a respectful fear of what Dad calls “The Shakes.”

Leaving her environment to forge a fresh start in her adult life, she learns more about the hereditary nature of HD, and dreads that it might very well be following her. Each child of an affected parent has a 50% chance of inheriting the HD-causing gene. Should she marry or have children? Should she undergo pre-symptomatic testing, eliminating the “tortured hope,” for enduring the risk of being positive teams with the chance of being negative, one making the other bearable?

As her grandmother, great-aunts and other family members succumb to HD, she assumes the role of guardian for her father. He cycles from one adult care home to another, while she advocates for his needs and his dignity.

With authenticity and grit this family’s story spans three generations and touches on topics often underrepresented and yet suffered quietly by those with HD and their caregivers. The author covers difficult and downplayed aspects of what has been called the cruelest disease, with symptoms described as having ALS, Parkinson’s, and Alzheimer’s simultaneously. Listeners will race through this book, release a held breath, and then rewind back to take in parts again, as the author describes with precision the debilitating progression of HD and the humanity that prevails.

©2024 Lori Jones (P)2025 Lori Jones
Medical Professionals & Academics Memoir
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Living with any chronic, life-threatening disease is not an easy path in life. It doesn’t just affect the person with the disease, but those closest to them as well. Lori describes in detail what it was like growing up with her father having Huntington’s disease. There’s fun and happy times, but anxiety and eggshell-walking, with a lot of stress. Sadly her father had other blood relatives afflicted with the condition. When there’s no cure, the outlook is bleak. Testing is possible to check for a specific DNA change in the HTT gene. Children have a 50/50 chance of having HD. Many offspring actually find it something of a dilemma as to whether to have the test.
Lori’s relationship with her dad shifted when she was older and took on responsibility for him, thankfully supported by her loving husband. Lori also describes her early working days, which involved her interacting with HD patients. This memoir is open, honest and raw. It is well written, flows easily, and it is beautifully narrated by the author herself. Interesting and informative. Highly recommend.

Living a difficult path

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