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- 🇨🇦CA · Personal Journals#1255K to 30K
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Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
2.5K to 15K🎙 ~2x weekly·353 episodes·Last published 1w ago - Monthly Reach
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5K to 30K🇨🇦100% - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
2K to 12K
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ONCE UPON A GENE – EPISODE 276: His Two Sons Were Diagnosed with Coats Plus Syndrome — One Father’s Story of Rare Disease Advocacy and Brotherhood with Bryan Docobo
Jun 11, 2026
41m 17s
ONCE UPON A GENE – EPISODE 275: How AI is Making Personalized Therapies Faster, Cheaper, and Accessible for the World’s Rarest Diseases with Steven Ringel
May 28, 2026
44m 37s
ONCE UPON A GENE – EPISODE 274: Caregiver Archetypes of Survival (Part 4) | The Victim Archetype: From Cowardly Lion to Roaring Warrior – Reclaiming Your Inner Courage Without Losing Yourself with Christy Foster
May 21, 2026
1h 01m 55s
ONCE UPON A GENE - EPISODE 273 Caregiver Archetypes of Survival (Part 3) The Saboteur Archetype: Reclaiming Your Inner Authority Without Losing Yourself, w/ Christy Foster
May 14, 2026
1h 02m 39s
ONCE UPON A GENE - EPISODE 272 Caregiver Archetypes of Survival (Part 2) The Prostitute Archetype: Reclaiming Your Worth Without Losing Yourself, w/ Christy Foster
Apr 23, 2026
45m 08s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/11/26 | ![]() ONCE UPON A GENE – EPISODE 276: His Two Sons Were Diagnosed with Coats Plus Syndrome — One Father’s Story of Rare Disease Advocacy and Brotherhood with Bryan Docobo | Bryan Docobo — attorney, father, rare disease advocate, and founder of the Coats Plus Foundation. Bryan opens up about the devastating journey of losing his four-year-old son Ethan to Coats Plus Syndrome (a rare telomere disorder caused by a CTC1 gene mutation) in June 2024, while fiercely fighting for his older son Liam, who is also battling the same condition. Bryan shares the pre-diagnosis struggles, the shocking moment of Liam’s grand mal seizure that led to the diagnosis, the science behind the disease (telomere dysfunction affecting blood vessels, brain, eyes, and GI tract), and the proactive steps his family has taken. These include pushing for Avastin (anti-VEGF) treatment that has stopped brain calcifications and leukodystrophy progression in Liam, stem cell infusions showing clinical improvements, and an ambitious push for personalized gene therapy (requiring $3–5 million in funding).He also discusses the profound grief that transformed into purpose, including losing 80 pounds, deepening his spirituality, and founding the Luminary Tribe — a growing men’s support community in South Florida (with plans to expand) focused on vulnerability, connection, and helping high-achieving men show up stronger for their families. This episode is a masterclass in resilience, advocacy, fatherhood, and turning unimaginable pain into meaningful action that could help not just Coats Plus families but the broader rare disease and longevity communities. Links: Coats Foundation LUMENARY Instagram Bryan's Instagram | 41m 17s | ||||||
| 5/28/26 | ![]() ONCE UPON A GENE – EPISODE 275: How AI is Making Personalized Therapies Faster, Cheaper, and Accessible for the World’s Rarest Diseases with Steven Ringel | Get your free Nome report at www.nome.bio – Families can upload a genetic report and receive a free personalized therapy feasibility report in minutes. In this powerful conversation, Effie Parks sits down with Steven Ringel — patient, sibling of a patient, founder of the Kizuna Foundation, and CEO of Nome to discuss how AI is revolutionizing personalized medicine for the smallest rare disease communities. Diagnosed at 17 with an ultra-rare inherited retinal disease caused by mutations in the KIZ gene (and later learning his younger sister Natalie shares the exact same diagnosis), Steven refused to accept the doctors’ advice to “learn braille and prepare to go blind.” Instead, he built a 501(c)(3) to develop custom gene therapies and then launched Nome, an AI operating system that makes personalized therapies faster, cheaper, and accessible even to the tiniest patient advocacy groups. Since the original recording, Nome has exploded: they closed a $2.7 million seed round and their AI platform is now live at nome.bio Steven shares the deeply human side of rare disease, the operational bottlenecks that hold back small patient-led efforts, and how Nome’s AI acts as the “quarterback” to coordinate experts, manufacturers, and regulators — turning “maybe” into clear, actionable next steps. If you or a loved one has a genetic diagnosis and you’re wondering whether a personalized therapy could be possible, head over to www.nome.bio right now and upload your genetic report. It’s completely free, takes just minutes, and could open doors you didn’t even know existed. Steven and the Nome team built this tool because every patient deserves to know their options — no matter how rare their condition is. Thanks for listening to Once Upon a Gene! If this episode lit a spark, share it with a fellow rare disease family and help us spread the word about Nome. See you in the next episode! | 44m 37s | ||||||
| 5/21/26 | ![]() ONCE UPON A GENE – EPISODE 274: Caregiver Archetypes of Survival (Part 4) | The Victim Archetype: From Cowardly Lion to Roaring Warrior – Reclaiming Your Inner Courage Without Losing Yourself with Christy Foster | In the final episode of their four-part archetype series, Effie Parks and archetype expert Christy Foster explore the Victim Archetype—represented by the Cowardly Lion in The Wizard of Oz. They emphasize that archetypes are neutral energies (as taught by Carl Jung and Caroline Myss) that everyone experiences. The conversation is tailored for parents raising children with disabilities, focusing on the real, repeated feelings of powerlessness, fear, and exhaustion—and how to alchemize them by dancing between the Victim and the Warrior. Christy guides listeners through noticing victim language and patterns, invoking the Warrior for sacred action (like holding your child during medical procedures), repairing afterward, asking for/receiving help, reparenting the inner child, and interrupting mental loops. Effie shares personal stories about hot yoga as repair, using cowgirl boots as a power object, and the daily reality of “going ice” (dissociating) vs. staying embodied as the Warrior. The episode is compassionate, practical, and full of simple tools you can put on your fridge or bedside table today. Subscribe to Christy’s podcast: No One is Perfect Once Upon a Gene Episode 29: Oxygen Masks & Motherhood with Christy Foster Once Upon a Gene Episode 239: How Stress Shows Up in the Body as Real Pain with Christy Foster If this episode touched you, please share it with another rare disease or special needs parent who needs to hear that they’re not alone — and that hope can come back. 💛 Thanks for listening! CONNECT WITH EFFIE PARKS X Instagram Linkedin Leave a Podcast Review | 1h 01m 55s | ||||||
| 5/14/26 | ![]() ONCE UPON A GENE - EPISODE 273 Caregiver Archetypes of Survival (Part 3) The Saboteur Archetype: Reclaiming Your Inner Authority Without Losing Yourself, w/ Christy Foster | In part 3 of our 4-part series on Caregiver Archetypes, my sister and somatic therapist Christy Foster returns to unpack the Saboteur — the clever inner voice that second-guesses you, overthinks everything, and talks you out of what you actually want and need. We explore how this archetype shows up for caregivers (especially around time, perfectionism, trusting your gut when doctors gaslight you, asking for help, and feeling “not enough”). You’ll learn how to spot the Saboteur in real time, separate doubt from data, run tiny experiments to rebuild self-trust, and shift from the Scarecrow (who believes he has no brain) into the Magician — the part of you that creates something out of nothing, including time and sovereignty. This episode is packed with practical language shifts, somatic awareness, and compassionate tools that have literally changed how I show up for myself and Ford. | 1h 02m 39s | ||||||
| 4/23/26 | ![]() ONCE UPON A GENE - EPISODE 272 Caregiver Archetypes of Survival (Part 2) The Prostitute Archetype: Reclaiming Your Worth Without Losing Yourself, w/ Christy Foster✨ | Caregiver ArchetypesProstitute Archetype+3 | Christy Foster | The Prostitute Archetype: Reclaiming Your Worth Without Losing YourselfThe Saboteur Archetype | — | self-abandonmentcaregiver needs+1 | — | 45m 08s | |
| 4/16/26 | ![]() Caregiver Archetypes for Survival (Part 1) The Child Archetype : Soothe Your Inner Child Without Letting It Drive the Bus, w/ Christy Foster✨ | Caregiver ArchetypesChild Archetype+2 | Christy Foster | Once Upon a Gene Episode 29Oxygen Masks & Motherhood+1 | — | inner childstress patterns+2 | — | 55m 08s | |
| 4/2/26 | ![]() From Hopeless Grief to Heavenly Hope: Brittni Lamb on Surrender, Faith, and Raising a Son with Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia SPG3A✨ | The darkest days after diagnosis and what hopelessness felt likeThe moment surrender changed everything+4 | Brittni Lamb | weight training | Arizona | Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia SPG3Agrief+4 | — | 30m 15s | |
| 10/24/25 | ![]() Smarter Speech: How Q-Voice Is Changing AAC for Families and Therapists with Lana Marcucio✨ | AAC systemscommunication+3 | Lana Marcucio | Q-Voice | — | Q-Voicespeech therapy+4 | — | 42m 56s | |
| 10/16/25 | ![]() Why Genetic Testing Matters: The Case for Genetic Testing and the Start Genetic Movement - with Geraldine Bliss✨ | genetic testingPhelan-McDermid syndrome+3 | Geraldine Bliss | Start GeneticCureSHANK+2 | — | CureSHANKStart Genetic+3 | — | 46m 37s | |
| 10/2/25 | ![]() Mini Brains in a Dish: Organoids and the Future of Personalized Rare Disease Medicine✨ | organoidsrare disease research+3 | Dr Maya Gosztyla | Brainstorm TherapeuticsOnce Upon a Gene | — | mini brainsclinical trials+3 | — | 38m 28s | |
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| 9/4/25 | ![]() Healing in the Mess: Storytelling, Friendship & Finding Love - Author of The Unlikely Village of Eden, Emma Nadler✨ | storytellinggrief+6 | Emma Nadler | The Unlikely Village of EdenSubstack+2 | — | The Unlikely Village of Edenmemoir+1 | — | 53m 58s | |
| 8/28/25 | ![]() 15 Years of Simons Searchlight: Dr. Wendy Chung on How Families Shape Rare Disease Research and Spark Aha Moments - with Wendy Chung✨ | genetic conditionsautism+6 | Wendy Chung | Simons SearchlightSimon's Searchlight | — | early detectionintervention+6 | — | 23m 46s | |
| 6/12/25 | ![]() A Rare Collection - Rare Disease Storytelling with Kyle Bryant, Jennifer Siedman, Liz Morris and Ashley Fortney Point✨ | rare diseasestorytelling+2 | Kyle BryantJennifer Siedman+2 | A Rare Collection - Rare Disease StorytellingA Rare Collection-+1 | EarthThe Pacific Northwest+1 | Friedreich’s AtaxiaSanfilippo Syndrome+2 | — | 24m 32s | |
| 6/5/25 | ![]() Finding Joy in the Journey: A Guide for Parents of Medically Complex Kids with Amber Pierson & Chelsea Kuhn✨ | joyparenting+3 | Amber PiersonChelsea Kuhn | Finding Joy in the JourneyLemon Cake+2 | — | Instagram Livee-book+2 | makinglemoncake.comONCEUPONAGENE | 42m 47s | |
| 5/15/25 | ![]() From Beast Games Champ to Rare Disease Warrior: Jeff Allen’s 365-Mile Ruck for His Son’s Creatine Transporter Deficiency | In this episode, Jeffrey Allen, a passionate advocate for rare disease awareness and a dedicated father to Lucas, who has creatine transporter deficiency. (CTD is also referred to as SLC6A8 Deficiency, CRTR, and X-linked Creatine Transporter Deficiency.Mutations in the SLC6A8 gene result in CTD.While patients with CTD have the necessary AGAT and GAMT enzymes to form creatine, the creatine transporter does not function properly. This results in creatine in the bloodstream, but not in the brain and muscles.) Jeffrey shares his journey of parenting a child with a rare disease, the life lessons he has learned from Lucas, and his experiences participating in the Ruck for Rare and the Beast Games. He emphasizes the importance of community support, advocacy, and the beauty found in challenges. The conversation highlights the significance of genetic testing and awareness for rare diseases, as well as the need for connection and communication among parents in similar situations. | 33m 12s | ||||||
| 5/1/25 | ![]() GeneDx Launches Cerebral Palsy Genetic Testing Pillar & Discover Snapshot: For Deeper Insights and to Help You Grow Your Patient Community – with Gay Grossman | In this episode of Once Upon a Gene, I’m joined again by rare mom and powerhouse advocate Gay Grossman. Gay works at GeneDx—home to one of the largest clinical genomic databases—and she’s here to share two exciting updates that could change everything for rare families and patient advocacy orgs. We talk about: GeneDx’s new commitment to the cerebral palsy community and why every CP diagnosis deserves a genetic test How families can access exome and genome testing through telehealth The launch of the Discover Snapshot, a tool designed to help rare orgs find, understand, and grow their communities using real genomic data We also dive into why many CP, autism, and epilepsy diagnoses are just the beginning—and how getting to the root cause can open doors to treatments, clinical trials, and life-changing connection. 🔗 Resources & Links: Request your Patient Count or Discover Snapshot: advocacy@genedx.com Learn more about genetic testing and CP: GeneDx.com Access testing through Genome Medical: Genome Medical Key Topics: Genetic testing access and equity Ending the diagnostic odyssey for CP Empowering patient advocacy orgs with data How to use genetic diagnoses to unlock treatment options The power of community and connection | 32m 49s | ||||||
| 4/18/25 | ![]() Empowered Kids - Painless Labs :O'Ryan Health’s At‑Home Blood‑Draw Revolution with Tim Coleman | Turning Kids into Superheroes of Science with O’Ryan Health The world of pediatric autoimmune and rare diseases can feel isolating—especially when answers live behind hospital walls or research centers far from home. But what if science came to you? What if kids could lead the charge in reimagining care? In this episode, I’m joined by Dr. Tim Coleman, co-founder and COO of O’Ryan Health, a company flipping the script on pediatric research. Their breakthrough Artemis Platform is a child-friendly, at-home blood collection and logistics system that supports autoimmune, rare disease, and routine lab testing—making it possible for families to contribute to science and receive care without ever stepping into a hospital or lab. Tim and his team are building something extraordinary: a world where kids become superhero scientists, collecting blood samples at home with a virtually painless device, and helping unlock breakthroughs in real time. Inspired from the lived experience of co-founder Michael Parnell, whose daughter battles juvenile myositis, O’Ryan Health isn’t just a company—it’s a movement, empowering families to drive discovery and rewrite the future of pediatric healthcare. We talk about: Why families should lead—not follow—in pediatric research How at-home blood sampling could power new diagnostics, treatments, and even cures The vision of a future where all pediatric blood work happens at home If you’ve ever dreamed of a healthcare system that sees, hears, and respects your child—this conversation is for you. Learn more and become a superhero family at oryan.health Follow along on Instagram: @oryan.health | 34m 00s | ||||||
| 3/27/25 | ![]() Navigating the Complexities of Grief: How One Mother’s Grief Birthed a Supportive Community with, Heather Straughter. | In this heartfelt conversation, Heather Straughter shares her profound journey through grief after the loss of her son, Jake. She discusses the pivotal moments that shaped her path, the importance of community support, and the ongoing nature of grief. Heather reflects on the complexities of acknowledging loss, the unexpected triggers that can arise, and her evolving perspective on grief hierarchies. Through her experiences, she emphasizes the significance of finding one's own way to cope and the power of humor in navigating the dark moments of grief. In this conversation, Heather Straughter shares her personal journey through grief after the loss of her son, Jake. She discusses societal expectations surrounding grief, the dual nature of grief as both painful and transformative, and the importance of community support. Heather also talks about the creation of her podcast, 'A Place of Yes,' aimed at sharing stories of families dealing with similar challenges, and her mission to help families navigate the complexities of caring for children with special needs. The conversation emphasizes the need for compassion, understanding, and proactive support for grieving families. Follow: Jake's Help From Heaven A Place Of Yes Podcast on Instagram Chapters 00:00 Introduction and Personal Connection 01:41 The Impact of Grief on Life Choices 02:50 Navigating Grief and Community Support 08:21 The Ongoing Nature of Grief 10:33 The Complexity of Grief and Acknowledgment 12:26 Triggers and Unexpected Moments of Grief 15:59 The Hierarchy of Grief 18:23 Coping Mechanisms and Humor in Grief 22:09 The Dark Side of Grief 24:22 Unspoken Aspects of Grief 26:07 Finding Your Own Path in Grief 29:20 Navigating Grief: Societal Expectations and Personal Experiences 32:43 The Dual Nature of Grief: Pain and Growth 36:47 Creating a Supportive Community: The Birth of a Podcast 42:06 Expanding the Mission: Helping Families Beyond Local Boundaries 54:16 Words of Comfort: Supporting Grieving Families | 53m 11s | ||||||
| 3/20/25 | ![]() Reimagining Pediatric Healthcare: How Imagine Pediatrics is Revolutionizing In-Home Medical Care for Medically Complex Kids and Lightening the Load for Families - Taylor Beery and Jody Copp | Reimagining Pediatric Care with Imagine Pediatrics For families of medically complex kids, the healthcare system often feels broken—long hospital stays, insurance battles for basic needs, and constant caregiving without real support. But what if there was a better way? In this episode, I’m joined by Taylor Beery, co-founder of Imagine Pediatrics, Jody Copp, a full-time rare disease dad of two boys with Combined oxidative phosphorylation deficiency type 13 associated with a mutation in the PNPT1 gene and whose family has experienced firsthand the impact of their care model. Imagine Pediatrics is changing the game by providing 24/7, in-home, virtual-first medical care designed to keep kids safe at home—not in the hospital. He also has a rad foundation that we will chat about in a future episode: Raising Wheels Foundation If you are in Texas, Florida, and District of Columbia you have access to Imagine Pediatrics! We discuss: 💙 The problems with the current healthcare system for medically complex kids 💙 Why "safe days at home" should be the goal of pediatric care 💙 How Imagine Pediatrics partners with families rather than making them fight for care 💙 The economic case for home-based care and why insurance should want this model 💙 Walker’s legacy— how Taylor’s son inspired a movement to improve pediatric healthcare Kids Join the Fight 🔗 Listen now & share with families who need this | 44m 38s | ||||||
| 3/6/25 | ![]() How a Service Dog Helped a Child with CACNA1C-Related Disorder (Timothy Syndrome) Gain Independence – with Sue Bresnahan | Service dogs are often associated with guiding the blind or assisting with mobility, but their impact goes far beyond traditional roles. In this episode, I’m joined by Sue Bresnahan, a pediatric nurse and rare mom, whose son has CACNA1C-related disorder (Timothy Syndrome). When they welcomed Yammy, his service dog, into their family, everything changed. Yammy didn’t just provide companionship—he unlocked a level of independence and confidence that Sue never imagined possible for her son. Sue shares their journey, the process of getting a service dog, and why families of kids with disabilities should consider this life-changing support. If you’ve ever wondered how a service dog could help a child beyond the traditional reasons, this episode is for you. In This Episode, We Discuss: ✔️ Sue’s journey as a rare mom and navigating CACNA1C-related disorder (Timothy Syndrome) ✔️ The unexpected ways service dogs can support kids with disabilities ✔️ How Yammy transformed her son’s independence and confidence ✔️ The process of getting and training a service dog ✔️ What families should know before pursuing a service dog ✔️ Overcoming challenges and misconceptions about service dogs ✔️ Advice for families considering a service dog Resources & Links: 📌 Learn more about CACNA1C-related disorder (Timothy Syndrome) 📌 Service Dog Organizations & Resources - ECAD 📌 Connect with Sue Bresnahan - Instagram 📌 Want to support Once Upon a Gene? Leave a review on Apple Podcasts & share this episode! | 32m 21s | ||||||
| 2/27/25 | ![]() Unlocking Rare Disease Diagnoses with PacBio’s Long-Read Sequencing – A Conversation with CEO Christian Henry | I’m joined by Christian Henry, CEO of PacBio, a company leading the way in high-accuracy long-read sequencing. We break down what that means in simple terms, how this technology is helping families solve their diagnostic odyssey, and why some genetic tests miss key information that PacBio can detect. Plus, if you've already had whole genome sequencing without finding an answer, Christian explains why it might be time to take another look. We also dive into the future of genetic testing, what needs to change for sequencing to become a routine part of medical care, and how families and advocates can help drive progress forward. This episode is all about hope, science, and the relentless pursuit of answers. Happy Rare Disease Day, and thank you for being part of this incredible community! Topics Covered: ✅ What is long-read sequencing, and how is it different from traditional genetic testing? ✅ How PacBio’s technology is solving rare disease mysteries faster and more accurately. ✅ Why some families don’t get answers from whole genome sequencing—and why they should consider trying again. ✅ The biggest barriers to making genetic testing more accessible and routine in rare disease care. ✅ How long-read sequencing could help lead to future treatments, not just diagnoses. ✅ What the next five years of genomic sequencing could look like. ✅ How rare disease families and advocacy groups can collaborate with PacBio to accelerate discoveries. Resources & Links: 🔗 Learn more about PacBio and long-read sequencing: https://www.pacb.com/ 🔗 Follow PacBio on X: @PacBio 🔗 More about Rare Disease Day: www.rarediseaseday.org 💬 Join the Conversation! Have you been on a diagnostic odyssey? Have questions about genetic testing? Share your thoughts and experiences with me on Instagram 🎧 Listen & Subscribe: Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an episode! If you love the show, leave a review—it helps more rare disease families find these conversations. 💙 | 33m 32s | ||||||
| 2/20/25 | ![]() Prioritizing Caregiver Health: Gut Health, Stress, and Sustainable Wellness for Parents of Kids with Disabilities – with Integrative Health Practitioner & CTNNB1 Mom, Fraser Bridgeman | As caregivers, we give everything to our kids—but where does that leave us? Burnt out, exhausted, and running on fumes. If you’ve ever felt like you don’t even know where to start when it comes to your own health, this episode is for you. I’m talking with Fraser Bridgeman, a fellow CTNNB1 mom and a functional integrative health practitioner, about the small but powerful changes we can make to support our own well-being. Fraser understands the unique challenges rare disease caregivers face—chronic stress, poor sleep, inflammation, and running on adrenaline for years at a time. She’s sharing practical, realistic ways to prioritize your health so you can show up for your child without running yourself into the ground. In this episode, we discuss: ✨ The most common health issues caregivers face (and how stress affects the gut, sleep, and hormones) ✨ How to make small, sustainable changes—even when you’re overwhelmed ✨ Easy food swaps to support energy, gut health, and stress resilience ✨ Practical ways to improve sleep and manage cortisol levels ✨ How movement, breathwork, and mindfulness can help regulate a taxed nervous system ✨ The mindset shift that will help you prioritize your own health without guilt Listen now and take the first step toward caring for yourself—because you matter, too. Follow Fraser on Instagram Fraser's Integrative Health Website | 45m 09s | ||||||
| 1/30/25 | ![]() Breaking the Silence: Growing Up with Sickle Cell, Facing Pain, and Finding Strength Through Advocacy with James Griffin | In this powerful episode of Once Upon a Gene, I sit down with James Griffin, author of Breaking Silence: Living With Sickle Cell Anemia. Diagnosed at just two years old, James spent much of his life keeping his condition a secret, fearing how others would perceive him. He faced excruciating pain, hospitalizations, and the daily challenges of living with a chronic illness—all while navigating school, friendships, and a world that often didn’t understand his struggles. Now, as an advocate and author, James is using his voice to raise awareness, empower others with sickle cell disease, and push for better care, research, and understanding. In this conversation, he shares what it was like growing up with sickle cell, the language he’s learned to use in emergency rooms to be taken seriously, and how he found the courage to finally open up about his diagnosis. Whether you or a loved one are affected by sickle cell disease, or you simply want to hear an inspiring story about resilience and advocacy, this episode is for you. | 33m 24s | ||||||
| 1/23/25 | ![]() Lighting the Way: A Story of Love, Friendship, and Finding New Dreams - CERT1 w/ Samantha & Wesley Rogers | In this inspiring episode of Once Upon a Gene, I sit down with Samantha and Wesley Rogers, founders of Lottie’s Light Foundation, and proud parents of the incredible Lottie, who lives with a CERT1 mutation. The Rogers share the heartfelt story of how their journey with Lottie led to the creation of a foundation dedicated to empowering families, fostering connections, and encouraging others to find strength in the face of challenges. We explore how their mission encourages fighting for meaningful friendships, dreaming new dreams, and discovering untapped capacity for love and purpose. This conversation will leave you uplifted, motivated, and ready to celebrate the light that shines in every rare journey. Highlights: The heartfelt origin story of Lottie’s Light Foundation. Insights into Lottie’s personality, resilience, and the joy she brings to those around her. How the foundation inspires families to fight for friendships and redefine their dreams. Samantha and Wesley’s advice on finding your capacity in the hardest moments. Tips for building friendships and community in the rare disease world. A reminder of the power of community and the importance of showing up for Rare Disease Day. Mentioned in This Episode: Lottie’s Light Foundation Website Rare Disease Day 2025 in San Diego – Event details coming soon! Tips for building friendships and community in the rare disease world. Call to Action: Let’s spread the light! Share this episode with your friends and community to celebrate the resilience, strength, and brilliance of the rare disease journey. If you’re in San Diego or feeling adventurous, join us for Rare Disease Day 2025! Details coming soon. As always, don’t forget to rate, review, and subscribe to Once Upon a Gene. Your support helps bring these powerful stories to more ears! | 38m 56s | ||||||
| 1/16/25 | ![]() Preconception & Prenatal Genetic Testing 101: A Conversation with Genetic Counselor, Natalie Richheimer | In this episode, I sit down with Natalie Richheimer, a genetic counselor at JScreen, to dig into the world of preconception and prenatal genetic testing. We explore the basics of carrier screening, how to interpret results, and the importance of genetic counseling for both new and experienced parents—especially those who already have a child with a rare disease. Natalie also sheds light on Variants of Uncertain Significance (VUS) and offers insight into talking with family members about genetic risks and results. Throughout our chat, Natalie emphasizes that knowledge truly is power when it comes to family planning and navigating the complexities of genetic information. We discuss strategies for deciding between natural pregnancy, IVF with genetic screening, and other alternatives, helping you feel more confident and informed about your options. Whether you’re just beginning your journey or seeking clarity in the midst of it, this episode offers valuable perspectives and heartfelt advice. Join us as we learn how to take charge of our genetic health and family-planning decisions with compassion and confidence. Finally, don’t forget about the Once Upon a Gene Revival—an uplifting event designed to support, educate, and connect rare disease caregivers. Registration is open now on my website. Links: JScreen Genetic Testing Instagram Once Upon A Gene Revival | 42m 57s | ||||||
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