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BBS Radio TV is engaged in the production and distribution of original live talk radio. We engineer and produce over 120 hours of talk show programming every week since 2004. A network of powerful personalities providing illuminating information!


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The Care Compass, May 29, 2026

Sat, 30 May 2026
The Care Compass with Nicole Brandon

Caring for Aging Parents: Neal Wiser on Hope, Alzheimer’s, and Staying Strong Through the Journey
Guest Neal Wiser

Nicole Brandon Opens with a Personal Caregiving Journey

In this episode of The Care Compass, host Nicole Brandon opens by acknowledging that it has been a difficult week and that she is continuing her own challenging journey with her parents. She introduces longtime friend and guest Neal Wiser, describing him as an exceptionally talented writer, a person of deep character, and someone whose own caregiving journey with his parents may help listeners facing similar challenges. Nicole explains that Neal had responded to a personal post she made about her parents, and his message moved her deeply because it revealed that he had walked through many of the same emotional and practical struggles.

Neal Wiser on the Shock of Becoming a Caregiver

Neal explains that every caregiving situation is different, but that many families face common emotional and logistical difficulties when aging parents begin to decline. He says he wishes he had known earlier what he knows now, because the journey can unfold unpredictably and demand far more than expected. Neal credits his wife, an attorney who does not currently practice, with helping him navigate some of the practical and legal complexity. He emphasizes that even when a person can see trouble coming, the actual moment of crisis still feels shocking and difficult to manage.

His Father’s Essential Tremors and Experimental Treatment

Nicole and Neal discuss his father’s experience with essential tremors, an uncontrollable shaking condition that had also affected Neal’s grandmother. Neal says his father’s tremors began mildly but eventually became so severe that they devastated his quality of life, making ordinary tasks like drinking from a cup extremely difficult. He explains that his father became a candidate for an experimental focused-ultrasound procedure at the University of Maryland, which used precise beams of energy to target the affected area of the brain. The procedure greatly improved his father’s right hand, giving him a meaningful period of restored function, but his father later died after a series of microstrokes before the second side could be treated.

Hope, Loss, and the Need to Stay Grounded

Nicole reflects on the emotional power of new medical possibilities, comparing Neal’s father’s treatment with her own family’s experience seeking experimental or research-based care. Neal says hope matters because it gives people the belief that things can improve, but he also describes himself as a pragmatist and realist. He recalls a friend whose son died by suicide and who described that death as “a permanent solution to a temporary problem,” a phrase Neal says has stayed with him during difficult times. He connects this to the importance of remembering that pain, crisis, and despair can be temporary, even when they feel overwhelming.

Caring for His Mother Through Alzheimer’s

After his father’s death, Neal immediately faced the need to care for his mother, who was living alone about two hours away. He describes warning signs that something was wrong, including unexplained dents in her car, difficulty walking safely, and growing isolation. Eventually, the family discovered that she was in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease. Neal discusses the painful process of taking away her ability to drive, arranging help at home, dealing with unreliable caregivers, and eventually moving her into an assisted-living facility near some of her remaining peers. He emphasizes how frightening and unhealthy isolation can become for older adults, especially during winter months or in communities where neighbors and friends have moved away or passed on.

Self-Care, Family Support, and Accepting What Others Can Give

A central message of the episode is the importance of caregivers taking care of themselves. Neal says that without self-care, caregivers cannot effectively help the people they love. He encourages listeners not to blame themselves for mistakes, not to collapse into guilt, and not to expect perfection from themselves or others. He also explains that some friends or relatives may step up while others may disappear or offer only limited help, and that caregivers must accept what people can and cannot give without becoming consumed by resentment. Nicole admits that she did not care for herself well enough during parts of her own caregiving experience and says she wishes she had heard advice like Neal’s earlier.

Senior Care, Medicaid, and Difficult Family Conversations

Neal also speaks about the practical side of elder care, including Medicare, Medicaid, senior-living facilities, and the difficulty of understanding programs quickly while under pressure. He advises families to begin conversations about finances, deeds, care plans, and legal preparations before a crisis arrives. He gives the example of his father changing the deed to the family home years earlier, which helped avoid losing the house during a later Medicaid look-back period. Neal contrasts that with another family’s situation where a house may have to be surrendered to help pay for care. His advice is to start early, move gently, and understand that older loved ones may resist those conversations because of fear, pride, embarrassment, or lack of information.

Writing, Memory, and the Lessons Caregiving Leaves Behind

Nicole also asks how Neal’s caregiving journey has influenced his writing. Neal says these experiences have helped him write older characters with more depth and empathy, including a recent short-film script involving a grandfather and younger generations struggling to communicate. He reflects on how Alzheimer’s can leave older memories intact while disrupting recent memory, and he reminds listeners that aging loved ones are also frightened, confused human beings who need strength, patience, love, and companionship. Nicole closes by reminding listeners that they are not alone, inviting them to email her at Nicole Brandon Worldwide with questions, and promising to seek out helpful experts and answers for people walking the caregiving path.

Signs of Life - Personal Experiences, May 28, 2026

Fri, 29 May 2026
Signs of Life - Personal Experiences - hosted by Dr. Betty Kovacs, Janet Mayer and Kimberly Saavedra

Personal Experiences of Spirit, Love, and Afterlife Connection

Everyone Has A Story To Share.
We Invite You To Share YOURS!

Many Of Us Have Personal Experiences That Defy Mainstream Thinking. Join Us As We Explore The Types Of Experiences That People Have, What They Mean, And How We Can Integrate Them Into Our Daily Lives.

Kimberly Saavedra Opens a Personal Experiences Conversation

In this episode of Signs of Life Radio, Kimberly Saavedra, Director of the Coma Communication Center, is joined by Dr. Betty Kovacs and Janet Mayer for a Personal Experiences program focused on survival of consciousness and direct afterlife encounters. The hosts invite callers to share experiences that do not involve mediums, including signs, communications, and moments that challenge mainstream views of death and consciousness. Kimberly notes how meaningful it is when all three hosts can be together, while Janet begins by returning to a powerful caller story from the previous month.

Returning to Laura’s Story of Love After an Abortion

Janet revisits the prior show’s final caller, Laura, who had spoken briefly about having an abortion and later experiencing an ongoing loving connection with the spirit of the child, whom she called Lily. Janet says she wanted to give the story more space because Laura had asked whether others had similar experiences. Janet reflects that the spirit may have chosen even a brief earthly experience with Laura and that the connection may have been meaningful for both of them. Betty then shares a related story of a stillborn child whose soul, in Betty’s strong intuitive impression, had received exactly the love and nurturing it needed during pregnancy and did not need to remain longer on Earth.

Continuing Bonds and the Nearness of Loved Ones

The hosts broaden the discussion into the idea that loved ones remain close after death. Janet says people often assume the deceased are far away, but in her experience, loved ones are likely nearby, present, and trying to communicate through signs. She encourages listeners to “pay attention” and accept meaningful experiences rather than dismissing them as imagination. Betty adds that people are connected with energies, guides, and loved ones beyond the physical world, and she says that even amid troubling events on Earth, people should not fall into despair because love, prayer, meditation, song, dance, and spiritual intention are contributing to a larger field of light.

Elizabeth’s Communications with Her Son Shawn

Caller Elizabeth shares that her son Shawn died by suicide in 2015 after struggling with severe depression. She says that within 24 hours of his passing, she woke in the early morning surrounded by what felt like a glowing cocoon of love and began communicating with him telepathically. According to Elizabeth, these communications continued regularly for about ten months, during which she kept a headlamp, pen, and paper nearby so she could write them down as they occurred. She says Shawn and what she called a spirit collective helped guide her through grief, forgiveness, and renewed purpose, teaching her that love is not merely a feeling but a powerful force connecting both sides.

Shawn in Spirit Speaks and Healing Through Love

Elizabeth explains that she has now written a book titled Shawn in Spirit Speaks: Love Is the Forever Adventure. She says the book includes his words as she received them and is expected to be released near the end of the summer or early fall, with an audiobook to follow. Betty asks whether Shawn spoke about his own decision to leave life, and Elizabeth says he did, describing the soul’s growth in terms of “attunement opportunities” rather than punishment. The hosts respond with compassion, emphasizing that such a story may comfort others grieving children or loved ones who died by suicide, while also showing that relationship and love continue beyond physical death.

Books, Signs, and Stories of Evidential Contact

After Elizabeth’s call, Janet encourages listeners to read spiritual books during the summer, suggesting that a sentence, page, or passage can become a meaningful message from spirit. Kimberly then shares stories from Diane Archangel’s work on afterlife encounters, including one in which a murdered son reportedly gave his mother specific information in a dream that helped police locate evidence, and another in which a deceased mother directed her son to hidden money in the house. These stories lead the hosts to discuss how verifiable information, unexpected signs, and meaningful synchronicities can become powerful experiences for people trying to understand survival after death.

Tiffany’s Sign from Her Beloved Dog

Caller Tiffany from California shares a personal experience involving her late dog, C.K. Mr. Haven, whom she describes as the love of her life. On the anniversary of the day she had to put him down, she was saddened that she could not find photos of him on her phone because they had been moved to an external drive. That same day, while clearing old papers from a speaker so she could set up a new printer, she discovered a stack of glossy photos of C.K. Mr. Haven. Tiffany says she knew this was a visit from her dog, and the hosts affirm the importance of animal souls and the loving ways they can continue to reach people.

Spirit, Music, Language, and the Closing Prayer

Near the end, Janet reminds listeners that spirit communication can come through books, songs, dreams, sensations, and other unexpected signs. She shares that after doing a Signs of Life reading show years earlier, she felt spirit touching her feet under the covers as though calming and grounding her energy. Betty recounts experiences involving spiritual support around death, including a friend who sensed a male spirit taking over healing work near Betty’s dying son and another father who experienced drumming around his daughter’s passing. Janet also discusses her own experience of receiving a spiritual language, which led to the title of her book, Spirits, They Are Present. The show closes with the Mahayana prayer for all beings everywhere to be fulfilled, awakened, liberated, and free.

The Sports Doctor, May 27, 2026

Wed, 27 May 2026
Guests, Dr Karli Richards and Kelly Braaten

Chuck And Julie Show, May 27, 2026

Wed, 27 May 2026
Co Gop chair candidate Joe oltmann

Beverage Chronicles, May 27, 2026

Wed, 27 May 2026
Title: Schlitz, Session IPAs and Starbucks Summer Strategy

Schlitz beer rose from Milwaukee brewing roots to become the world’s top-selling lager before collapsing in the 1970s after cost-cutting changes damaged quality and consumer trust.

Founders All Day IPA helped redefine the “session IPA” category by offering full hop character with lower alcohol, making craft beer more approachable and widely drinkable.

Starbucks’ new summer lineup uses colorful, layered drinks and experiential marketing to create premium, Instagram-ready beverages aimed at making customers feel the experience is worth the price.

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