エピソード

  • Heavyweight Vision: Inside the WABC Movement
    2026/03/01

    In this powerful episode of the WABC Show, we sit down with current Heavyweight Wheelchair Boxing Champion Jody Bennet, alongside WABC Founder Collin and CFO Terry, for an inside look at the momentum building behind the World Adaptive Boxing Council.

    Joining us from the UK, Collin — a former semi-pro rugby player — shares the vision that sparked the creation of WABC and how adaptive boxing is carving out its rightful place on the global stage. Terry, a former Paralympian, brings his elite-level experience to the conversation as he discusses the current state of the organization, what legitimacy and structure mean for adaptive combat sports, and previews a major boxing event coming this fall that promises to elevate wheelchair boxing to new heights.

    Champion Jody Bennet speaks candidly about representing the sport at the highest level, the hunger among athletes worldwide, and the growing push to see wheelchair boxing included in the Paralympic Games. The trio dives into the future of adaptive boxing, the pathway to international recognition, and what it will take to build a sustainable competitive platform for athletes.

    Most importantly, they open the door to the next generation. If you’re interested in adaptive sports or think you have what it takes to step into the ring, Jody shares how to get connected, receive guidance, and even try out for the WABC boxing team.

    This episode is about more than sport — it’s about access, opportunity, and building a movement.

    Collin Kent-Facebook

    https://gofund.me/fe973e47

    Jody Bennet- Facebook

    Aka_captain_amazing-IG

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    49 分
  • Life on Life's Terms with Lelan W Forester
    2026/02/15

    In this powerful and down-to-earth episode, we sit down with Lelan for a conversation that feels less like an interview and more like three friends talking beside the tailgate after a long day.

    At 22 years old, Leland’s life changed in an instant when an accident left him paralyzed from the T4 level down. He shares what those early days were really like, including his inpatient rehab experience at TIRR Memorial Hermann — the challenges, the breakthroughs, and the mental battle that begins long before the physical healing feels complete.

    We also talk about something that isn’t discussed enough: relationships after injury. Leland opens up about his wife leaving him post-injury and the reality that many people face significant relationship loss after a life-altering event. It’s raw. It’s honest. And it’s real.

    From there, the conversation shifts into life now — his current wheelchair setup, the benefits of a titanium frame versus aluminum, and how the right equipment can mean freedom, efficiency, and independence. But beyond the gear talk, we dig into something deeper: dealing with life on life’s terms. Lelan reflects on what was harder to navigate — the mental adjustments or the physical changes — and how resilience isn’t about pretending things are easy, but choosing to keep going anyway.

    This episode is authentic, vulnerable, and hopeful. And it’s a reminder that while injury can change your circumstances, it doesn’t have to define your identity.

    Facebook: Lelan Wendel Forester

    IG: Lelanforeser

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    1 時間 14 分
  • Loved But Not Accountable with Logan K Finn
    2026/02/13

    In this episode, we sit down with Logan K. Finn to unpack a story shaped by resilience, struggle, and transformation.

    Born with spina bifida, Logan grew up feeling loved and supported — so much so that he often says he didn’t realize he had a disability. But in seventh grade, a spinal tethering surgery left him using a wheelchair. Still, he stayed active in school and pushed forward socially and academically.

    By his senior year, marijuana use escalated quickly into heavy drug and alcohol abuse. We talk honestly about how that progression happens, especially when identity, accountability, and mental health go unaddressed. The Quad-Father shares insight on the role school districts play in identifying and supporting students with special needs, and why mental health resources for children are critical.

    Logan reflects on growing up deeply loved — but rarely held accountable — and how that shaped his early adulthood. A powerful spiritual experience later marked a turning point, bringing immediate healing from a condition he had suffered with for three years and igniting his recovery journey.

    The Quad-Father closes the show with a heartfelt moment shared with Logan, reminding listeners that growth, responsibility, and redemption are always within reach.

    Facebook: Logan K Finn

    IG: logankfinn

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    1 時間
  • Accessibility isn’t a courtesy — it’s a civil right. With Kristy Durso
    2026/02/02

    Accessibility isn’t a courtesy — it’s a civil right.

    In this powerful episode, we sit down with Kristy Durso—accessible travel advocate, travel agent, wheelchair user, and co-founder of Spectrum of Accessibility—to unpack what public accessibility really looks like and why travel remains one of the most exclusionary experiences for disabled people.

    Kristy shares her life before becoming a full-time wheelchair user, the emotional and identity shifts that followed, and the moment she realized the world itself—not her disability—would be one of her biggest barriers. From “technically accessible” spaces that fail in practice to travel nightmares that put safety and dignity at risk, this conversation pulls back the curtain on what most people never see.

    We also explore where accessibility is done right around the world, where it falls painfully short, and how education within the hospitality industry can be a true game-changer. Through her work with Spectrum of Accessibility, Kristy is helping hotels, airlines, and venues move beyond checklists toward lived-experience inclusion that benefits everyone—disabled travelers, aging populations, families, and businesses alike.

    This episode is equal parts truth, accountability, and hope—and a clear call to action for both disabled and nondisabled listeners.

    If you travel, work in hospitality, or care about inclusion, this is a conversation you need to hear.

    @kristy.durso Facebook

    @kristygoes IG

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    1 時間 24 分
  • The Mental Side of Disability with Mike Kent
    2026/01/25

    This is one of those episodes that stays with you long after the microphones are turned off.

    This conversation goes where disability conversations often don’t—into the quiet, heavy places. We talk about depression. Anxiety. The mental and emotional toll of disability that so often gets overlooked once the hospital stays end and the equipment is delivered.

    Our guest is Mike Kent, a Disability Life Coach and the founder of Empowering Disability, a global community of more than 9,000 members who are navigating life after injury, trauma, or diagnosis.

    Mike’s work goes far beyond motivation. Through Empowering Disability and MPower Coaching, he helps people confront anxiety, rebuild confidence, and rediscover their sense of worth—especially in the aftermath of life-changing events. He understands that the hardest battles aren’t always physical.

    But this conversation doesn’t stop in the darkness.

    Mike challenges us to look deeper—not at what was taken, but at how we respond to the cards we’re dealt. He reminds us that while disability may change the path, it does not erase purpose, value, or the ability to build a meaningful life.

    His message is clear and powerful: Disability is not the end of life. It’s an invitation to reclaim life—on our own terms.

    This is an episode about honesty, resilience, and the strength it takes to keep showing up when the world feels smaller than it used to. If you or someone you love has ever struggled with the mental weight of disability, this conversation is for you.

    IG: mikeawkent

    FB: Mike Kent

    Facebook Support Group: Empowering Disability

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    58 分
  • A Bullet, a Betrayal, and the Fight to Live: The Story of Joseph Huerta
    2026/01/15

    ⚠️ Content Warning: This episode contains discussion of gun violence, physical assault, and traumatic injury. Listener discretion is advised.

    Joseph Huerta’s story is one of brilliance, hardship, survival, and hard-earned faith. A top graduate in his class, Joseph’s life took an unexpected turn after family separation led him into homelessness, living in a tent city and navigating daily survival. What began as an act of kindness—being offered a place to stay by someone he trusted—quickly turned into a dangerous and life-altering situation.

    Joseph is a survivor of a violent home invasion. He was beaten and assaulted, and while running for the door to escape, he was shot in the back with a .40 caliber bullet. The impact shattered his spine at T11, leaving him paralyzed. In a moment that still echoes today, Joseph begged for his life as his attackers held a gun to his head.

    In this episode, Joseph speaks candidly about his early days in rehab, where he believed a back brace might allow him to walk again, and how the reality of paralysis set in. He shares how fellow patients—more than the clinical team—became his greatest teachers, helping him understand life in a wheelchair and how to truly adapt.

    After rehab, Joseph returned to California to live with his father, where new challenges emerged: ongoing battles with insurance, medical discrimination, and the harsh reality of managing a Stage 4 pressure wound that he has lived with for over three years. Rather than staying silent, Joseph turned his pain into purpose.

    Motivated by those who supported him in rehab, Joseph created his YouTube channel “Quick Tips,” where he answers real-world questions about activities of daily living for wheelchair users. He also launched his own clothing line, using creativity as another outlet for resilience and expression.

    Joseph opens up about how anger initially fueled his drive—but ultimately caused more harm than healing. At his lowest point, he turned to his faith, crying out to God for a sign—one that unmistakably came true and was captured on video.

    This episode also dives into honest, practical conversations around sex and intimacy after paralysis, wheelchair cushions, pressure relief techniques, and living with dignity despite constant obstacles. Raw, emotional, and deeply human, this is a powerful conversation about survival, accountability, faith, and finding meaning after everything changes.

    This is Joseph Huerta’s journey—and it’s one you won’t forget.

    Merch: T11merchproduct-6056.bigcartel.com

    @T11paraplegic youtube

    instagram.com/josephhuerta22?igsh=ODA1NTc5OTg5Nw==

    facebook.com/profile.php?id=100073011076748&mibextid=9R9pXO

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    1 時間 10 分
  • Rare Isn’t Rare with Giusiana Prosser
    2026/01/07

    At just 12 years old, Giusiana Prosser began experiencing medical symptoms that would change her life — symptoms that were dismissed, minimized, and misunderstood for years.

    After being told it was “all in her head,” Giusiana never stopped advocating for herself. At 19, she was diagnosed with Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, and at 21 with Andersen–Tawil Syndrome, finally giving a name to what her body had known all along. Today, she also lives with a tethered spinal cord.

    Now a artist, rare disease advocate, motivational speaker, and Ms. Wheelchair Washington USA, Giusiana uses her platform to challenge misconceptions around disability and share a powerful truth: “Rare isn’t rare.”

    In this episode, Giusiana opens up about growing up without answers, the emotional toll of not being believed, and how self-advocacy became her lifeline. She also shares how art, purpose, and resilience continue to shape her journey — including her upcoming path to Ms. Wheelchair USA 2026 and her artwork being featured at the Kennedy Center.

    This is a story about finding your voice, demanding to be heard, and choosing to live fully — even when the world doesn’t make it easy.

    🎧 Press play and meet Giusiana Prosser.

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    1 時間 7 分
  • Over the Edge: Tyler’s Fall, Fight, and Comeback
    2025/12/18

    In this powerful episode, we sit down with Tyler Keller, whose journey is rooted in grit, faith, and resilience. Tyler grew up on a small farm in Michigan, surrounded by rodeo culture—both of his parents were professional rodeo athletes, as were his older sisters. Following in their footsteps, Tyler competed at a national level, earning rodeo scholarships to Lamar Community College and later Northwestern Mesa College, where he continued to compete at an elite level.

    Everything changed in February 2015. During an early-morning drive through the dangerous Douglas Pass near Grand Junction, Colorado, Tyler lost control of his vehicle, crashing through a guardrail and plunging more than 180 feet. Miraculously, his vehicle landed on a ledge, preventing a further 2,000-foot fall. Severely injured, Tyler remained trapped in the wreckage for six to eight hours before emergency crews could reach him.

    Tyler’s road to recovery began at Craig Hospital in Colorado, where he underwent intense rehabilitation for his T4-T5 complete spinal cord injury. In this episode, he opens up about the physical and emotional challenges he faced, the victories along the way, and the unexpected role the hospital’s garden played in his healing and mindset. After being discharged, Tyler continued therapy five days a week for three years at the Rehabilitation Institute of Michigan—refusing to give up on himself or his future.

    Today, Tyler’s story is far from over. He is a Division II Detroit Pistons wheelchair basketball player, an entrepreneur, a paid motivational speaker, actor, model and an active participant in shooting competitions with the Battle Buddy 3-Gun nonprofit organization. Tyler’s journey is one of perseverance, purpose, and redefining what’s possible after life changes in an instant. This is a story you don’t want to miss.

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    1 時間 30 分