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Explore every episode of the podcast The Bridges Between Us

Dive into the complete episode list for The Bridges Between Us. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.

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TitlePub. DateDuration
The Bridges Between Us Trailer Episode30 Apr 202600:02:16

Hosted by Andy Thieman, The Bridges Between Us is a podcast from CaringBridge featuring honest conversations about caregiving, resilience, connection, and the ways people show up for one another during health journeys.

Through real stories from patients, caregivers, family members, and supporters, each episode explores what it means to navigate uncertainty, find hope, and feel less alone when life changes unexpectedly.

Send us your comments. We'd love to hear from you.

Grieving Twice: Sally Zibrowski on Alzheimer’s, Caregiving From a Distance, and Showing Up for Her Family07 May 202600:25:05

When Sally Zibrowski’s dad, Andy, was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and primary progressive aphasia in 2021 at age 71, her family began to quietly reorient around a new and uncertain reality. Over time, earlier signs - subtle behavioral changes, growing confusion, and moments of paranoia - began to make sense in a way that was both clarifying and heartbreaking.

In this episode of The Bridges Between Us, Sally shares what it has meant to support her family through Alzheimer’s - not as the primary caregiver, but as someone caring for the caregiver. Her mother carried the day-to-day responsibilities at home, while Sally worked to support both of them from a distance.

She reflects on starting her dad’s CaringBridge page to ease the emotional load on her mother, and how that simple decision became a critical source of connection for their wider community. Instead of managing constant texts and check-ins, CaringBridge became a shared place for updates, memories, and support.

Sally also speaks openly about taking FMLA leave to be present for her family, and what she learned about caregiving, exhaustion, and the ways support often arrives quietly - but meaningfully - when it is most needed.

Her father, David Anderson, a beloved Minnesota science teacher, baseball coach, and longtime basketball official, passed away in May 2025. His CaringBridge page remains a record of his story and the community that surrounded him throughout his illness.

This episode is for anyone navigating Alzheimer’s or dementia in their family, anyone supporting a caregiver, or anyone trying to understand how to show up when life changes slowly and unexpectedly.

Topics covered:

  • Early Alzheimer’s and dementia symptoms families often miss
  • Supporting a caregiver from a distance
  • Starting and managing a CaringBridge page
  • FMLA leave and family caregiving decisions
  • Anticipatory grief and emotional complexity in dementia care
  • What meaningful support looks like for caregivers
  • The lasting role of community in long health journeys

Send us your comments. We'd love to hear from you.

Living with Joy: Cris Ross on Two Cancer Diagnoses, Learning to Receive Support, and the CaringBridge Page That Changed Everything07 May 202600:26:28

Cris Ross spent more than a decade serving as Chief Information Officer at Mayo Clinic, helping lead one of the most respected healthcare organizations in the world through periods of enormous change and complexity.

Then, in 2018, he was diagnosed with colorectal cancer.

Used to solving problems and carrying responsibility for others, Cris approached treatment the same way he approached work: stay focused, push forward, and keep going. But cancer - and eventually cancer recurrence - forced him to confront something much harder than treatment itself: learning how to let people help him.

In this episode of The Bridges Between Us, Cris reflects on the emotional and physical realities of living through two cancer diagnoses, including chemotherapy, radiation, surgery, caregiving, and the uncertainty that comes with recurrence.

He also shares the turning point that led him to start a CaringBridge page after initially resisting the idea. What began as a practical way to update people became something much more meaningful: a way for friends, family, and community to show up for him during one of the hardest seasons of his life.

Throughout the conversation, Cris speaks candidly about perspective, vulnerability, gratitude, and what it means to keep choosing joy even when life changes unexpectedly.

For more on his book, Diagnosed, please visit: https://www.amazon.com/Diagnosed-Insiders-Guide-Healthcare-Journey-ebook/dp/B0CRKXC5SH

Topics covered:

  • Receiving a colorectal cancer diagnosis while leading at Mayo Clinic
  • Navigating chemotherapy, radiation, and recurrence
  • The emotional shift from caregiver and leader to patient
  • Why Cris initially resisted starting a CaringBridge page
  • Learning how to receive support from others
  • The role family and caregiving played during treatment
  • Living with gratitude, perspective, and joy after cancer

Send us your comments. We'd love to hear from you.

The Stranger Who Stopped, and the Road Back: Jeff Winston and Jackie Klinkner on Survival, Recovery, and Reconnection07 May 202600:38:15

⚠️ Content note: This episode includes descriptions of a serious accident and traumatic injury.

On a Sunday afternoon outside Minneapolis, Jeff Winston was in a life-altering motorcycle accident that he somehow survived - pulling himself safely to the side of the highway and calling for help.

Just behind him, Jackie Klinkner, a certified registered nurse anesthetist (CRNA), noticed something wasn’t right and made a split-second decision to stop. Using what she had on hand, she stabilized Jeff and stayed with him until emergency responders arrived.

They were strangers in a critical moment, connected only by circumstance.

Jeff lost his leg below the knee that night. Jackie went home not knowing what happened next.

Months later, she came across a CaringBridge page created by Jeff’s fiancée, where friends and family had been following his recovery through regular updates. Through those posts, Jackie finally learned Jeff had survived - and eventually found a way to reconnect.

In this episode of The Bridges Between Us, Jeff and Jackie share their story together: the accident, the moments immediately after, the uncertainty that followed, and the unexpected reunion that brought them back together.

Jeff also reflects on recovery, adapting to life after limb loss, supporting other amputees through Wiggle Your Toes, and the mindset shift that helped him move from focusing on what was lost to embracing what could still come next.

For more information on Wiggle Your Toes, please visit: https://wiggleyourtoes.org/

Topics covered:

  • The moments leading up to and following Jeff’s accident
  • Jackie’s decision to stop and provide care
  • Navigating sudden, life-changing injury
  • The role of CaringBridge in keeping people connected
  • Reconnecting after crisis
  • Recovery, resilience, and supporting others after limb loss
  • Adaptive sports, prosthetics, and finding new “firsts”

Send us your comments. We'd love to hear from you.

Close to Home: Paurvi Bhatt on Immigrant Family Caregiving, the Loneliness Epidemic, and Why Gen X Has to Start Asking for Help22 May 202600:29:26

Paurvi Bhatt has spent her career responding to crises, from the HIV pandemic to global health financing, and has worked alongside former First Lady Rosalynn Carter on caregiving advocacy. But it wasn't until she became a caregiver herself that she understood what was missing.

Paurvi grew up watching her father navigate the unimaginable: a wife in her twenties with cervical cancer, a mother dying of cancer in India, no car, no phone, and no way to reach family except by aerogram - the folded blue paper airmail letters that took weeks to arrive. He did it through community, ingenuity, and a Gujarati song he sang for decades whose lyrics, his family now realizes, described everything he couldn't say out loud.

In this episode of The Bridges Between Us, Paurvi shares what three generations of caregiving - her father's, her own, and the generation coming next - have taught her about community, trust, silence, and what happens when you finally let people know you need help. She talks about caring for both of her parents (her mother through five cancers, her father through early-onset dementia), being a solo ager, and why she believes Gen X - the latchkey generation that raised itself - is at a critical inflection point when it comes to asking for and receiving support.

She also reflects on what CaringBridge gave her family that her father never had: a way to let people in.

Send us your comments. We'd love to hear from you.

What Do We Do Now: One Family's Road Through Paralysis, Building Community and Connection05 Jun 202600:29:33

Mason was seventeen, a junior in high school, and a record-holding runner when he hit a ski jump going a little too fast and broke his T12 vertebra. He became paralyzed. The next morning, he woke up and said: we need to make a plan. In this episode, Mason and his mom Stacy talk about what paralysis really looks like - the losses that reveal themselves slowly, the community that showed up through CaringBridge and Craig Hospital, and how a teenage athlete became a disability advocate with a following of thousands. Honest, funny, and genuinely moving.

Send us your comments. We'd love to hear from you.

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