BLIND CHICK LIVING

By: BLIND CHICK LIVING medical documentary LIVING!! on dialysis medical interviews movie reviews
  • Summary

  • This is a podcast about BLIND CHICK LIVING on dialysis you all know Christina Gilchrist “BLIND CHICK LIVING on dialysis” with Moose “POMSKY SERVICE DOG” and Michael Gilchrist “THE CARETAKER” this is a podcast documentary and current events. Sarcastic but serious conversations about the trials of dialysis and how the warriors and carepartner caregiver handle it. Nothing is off limits and everything will be discussed the good and ugly of medical! From in center dialysis, PD peritoneal dialysis to Home hemo. #BLINDCHICKLIVING Leave us a voicemail with your questions!
    BLIND CHICK LIVING, medical documentary, LIVING!! on dialysis, medical interviews, movie reviews
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Episodes
  • NKF, FLORIDA VEGAS, NANT, ZIONS, HOOVER DAM, GRAND CANYON, drive of death then BRYCE CANYON
    Mar 31 2024
    Our home dialysis adventures! We went to WASHINGTON D.C. then went to MAIMI FLORIDA, Christina was able to swim in the ocean! We became grandparents March 2 2024, Mersadies Gilchrist gave birth to Eleanor and SO CUTE, then our Vegas trip we decided to make it a roadtrip. So we went to ZIONS National park, Mesquite Nevada, Las Vegas for the NANT ( national association of nephrologist technicians ) we spoke and it was amazing! Michael Chambers, Dr. Michael Krause, Mary Margrot, Suzy Phillips, Michelle Carver, Terry Livhfield, and Clarika Ajaya. To just name a few but look these guys up so amazing! We stayed in Tropicana Hotel and Casino which is being torn down so we were one of the last people to stay there. We saw Keeli and her family and little Maddi!!! She is talking and sooo cute! Then went to Hoover Dam and did the dam tour and rode the dam elevator, I also walked all over the dam thing! You all might not know this but it is not a god dam it is man made dam. Ok enough dam talk. We then went to Williams Arizona and rode the train to Grand Canyon, I then drove to Bryce Canyon and decided I would take the Brian Head canyon highway 14. We got stuck in so much snow!! It was crazy how much came down. Then went to Bryce Canyon that place is amazing then home!
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    56 mins
  • Marcelo Pena interviewed by BLIND CHICK LIVING podcast. Honored Click that like, follow and share!
    Feb 7 2024
    Interviewing Marcelo Pena The expression “making up for lost time” is used in many different situations. Buckets lists. To-do lists. Rekindled friendships and long-lost loves. But what if you spent decades of your life – from childhood in adulthood – feeling sick, and unable to live a fulfilling life? And what if, after living that way all those years, you suddenly found something that could help you feel better, be more independent, and enjoy the things you’d been missing? This is a quick glimpse into the life of Marcelo*, a 35-year-old home hemodialysis patient from North Carolina doing everything in his power to make up for the time he lost to end stage renal disease. Childhood Interrupted Marcelo started his life like most kids. He was happy and healthy, enjoyed playing with his cousins, and attended grade school in his home city of Chicago. At 10-years old he got sick and went to his doctor to figure out what was going on. After some testing, they found blood and protein in his urine and immediately ordered a biopsy. Then, a short time later, on his eleventh birthday, he was diagnosed with Focal Segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). FSGS is a disease that causes scar tissue build-up on the kidneys and can permanently impair their function. When Marcelo was 13 it was determined that his kidney function had declined and was now at a point where a decision had to be made, receive a transplant or start dialysis. That’s when Marcelo’s mother offered her own kidney. “My mother was my hero,” says Marcelo. “She gave me life twice. She said, ‘I’ll give him one of my kidneys and hopefully this will just all be a memory.’” Sadly the kidney Marcelo received only lasted around 6 months, once again due to complications from FSGS and he had to start dialysis. First it was peritoneal dialysis (PD), which was effective but left Marcelo with what felt like almost no time for himself. “Back then the machines were different, and I had to dialyze up to 12 hours straight,” Marcelo explains. “That was my life for three years. I felt like no one was going through what I was going through. I felt alone for a very long time.” In his late teens, Marcelo learned he could not continue PD and doctors prescribed in-center hemodialysis (ICHD) as the only alternative. That began a 16-year journey as an in-center patient. During that time, Marcelo experienced other health problems that almost turned deadly. And even though dialysis therapy kept him alive, he saw it as taking away from his quality of life. “It was almost like I was sentenced to dialysis,” Marcelo says. “For 16 years it was a Monday therapy session, and then I’d feel tired all day and into Tuesday. When I felt somewhat OK, I’d go out for a walk or something, but the next day I had to start all over again. It felt like dialysis, dialysis, dialysis, nonstop. I was so depressed and on all kinds of medications and antidepressants, just trying to cope.” It wasn’t until his thirties that Marcelo learned of another alternative to ICHD. A nurse at his clinic began telling him about more frequent home hemodialysis. Marcelo was in a dark place, and he needed a change, so he decided to try it. After his training was complete, he was able to do his therapy at home for the first time in decades. In addition to the physical changes Marcelo has seen and felt, he’s found several ways to make up for all those lost years. Since starting on HHD he has taken his NxStage machine to Disney World, Nashville, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania. He hosts a kidney health-based radio show on iHeart Radio and has an established presence on social media. He’s learning to play ukulele, writing a book, and is certified in yoga and meditation instruction. He also has a new best friend – a Boston Terrier named Benjamin! SEEYA NeXt time! To send us a voicemail to ask a question, make a comment or to tell us about your medical journey click on this link! https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/blindchickliving/message
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    1 hr and 27 mins
  • Interview Gabi Morales, 2 kidney transplants, dialysis, home dialysis kidney warrior
    Feb 2 2024
    Gabi has been a CKD patient her whole life. She was born with a kink in her ureters which caused one kidney to not form and the other to form partially. She was able to live the first two years of her life with the partial function before she went on dialysis. A month before her fifth birthday she received a living donor kidney from her father. Her father’s kidney lasted over a decade before she went back on dialysis abruptly in 2015. After doing all possible modalities of dialysis Gabi finally recieved her 2nd gift of life from a deceased donor 8.5 years later. She hopes to take this 2nd chance to help encourage & advocate for others just starting their CKD journey. SEEYA NeXt time! To send us a voicemail to ask a question, make a comment or to tell us about your medical journey click on this link! https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/blindchickliving/message
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    58 mins

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