
Audio
An Invitation to Listen
Audio is an invitation to listen, to be engaged and enriched through one-on-one storytelling, anytime and any place.
Discover the caring, compassionate, and friendly voices of Chronic Joy’s guest writers and of our own Voices of Chronic Joy® volunteers.
Therefore encourage one another and build each other up, just as in fact you are doing. (1 Thessalonians 5:11)
AUDIO BLOGS– SIGNIFICANT, RELEVANT, COMPELLING
An estimated 286 million people worldwide are visually impaired. Globally, about 1 in 10 people lives with dyslexia. Also, an estimated 69 million more people experience a traumatic brain injury each year. This often makes reading difficult or impossible.
In addition, the following issues make it hard to concentrate, focus thoughts or even comprehend reading material. This adds frustration, grief, and shame to the mix.
- chronic illness
- mental illness
- chronic pain
- brain fog
- exhaustion
- insufficient sleep
- nutrient deficiency
- side effects from medications
Chronic Joy has a deep desire to meet people where they are. We want to give them the tools they need in formats they can easily access. This prompted our first steps into audio during the summer of 2020.
CONNECT WITH CHRONIC JOY WRITERS AND VOLUNTEERS
We, as humans, are created for story. “We think in stories, remember in stories, and turn just about everything we experience into a story …” writes Carl Alviani.
Story is the backbone of Chronic Joy!
Our audio is an invitation to listen, to be engaged and enriched through one-on-one storytelling, anytime and any place. Come hear the caring, compassionate, and friendly voices of Chronic Joy’s guest writers. When that’s not possible, our very own Voices of Chronic Joy® volunteers step in.
AUDIO – GROWING IN ACCESSIBILITY AND INCLUSIVITY
Accessibility affects every one of us, and “should be built into the DNA of an organization,” says @FLLegal.
Rachael Bradley Montgomery adds, “Becoming accessible is a journey but it is one worth doing right.” We agree. Our greatest hope is for Chronic Joy® to grow into a welcoming, inviting, accessible, and inclusive ministry built for everyone.
“Every member of the Body of Christ is vital, integral, and necessary. Without even one the Body is incomplete.” Cindee Snider Re
Today, ”if your symptoms are preventing you from reading, you still have options!” writes Glenn A. “You can listen to audio.”
Join us! Scroll down, wander through our audio blog, slip on your headphones. Then let our audio soothe your weary soul.

Audio Blogs
Peace that Prevails
I love the word prevail, especially when paired with peace. Knowing I can experience inner calm, even when chronic pain triggers anxiety, settles my soul.
Trauma is Not Sin
Trauma belonged to others. I had experienced difficulties in my childhood, but I didn’t feel like I deserved that diagnosis when others had truly suffered.
Dealing with a Depressed Spouse: Tips from Experience
Years of experience dealing with my spouse's depression and pastoral counsel have taught me how to love him well. Discover what I've learned.

AUDIO’S SIGNIFICANT BENEFITS
AUDIO CAN LIGHTEN LONELINESS
Audio blogs offer a priceless human connection for those struggling with isolation and loneliness. The simple sound of a caring and compassionate human voice is powerful. It is like having a companion in the room keeping us company for a little while.
“There is something very comforting about having someone read to you … Audio delivers that same sort of intimacy,” writes David Lyman.
AUDIO CAN QUIET ANXIETY AND DEPRESSION
Anxiety and depression can make it challenging to quiet our thoughts and still our minds. On difficult days, audio offers an opportunity to focus on a single voice, to listen, learn, and rest.
Mary Ellen, who has Bipolar Disorder, writes, “I was utterly broken a few years ago when I discovered that reading was giving me heart palpitations and an intense sensation of panic. Listening to audio means I can put on my headphones, press play, and carve out space to step away from the world for a time.”
AUDIO CAN HELP US MANAGE CHRONIC PAIN
Chronic pain can feel very limiting. Audio can help. A study by Science Daily found that “mental distractions actually inhibit the response to incoming pain signals at the earliest stage of central pain processing.”
Katrina Zulak writes, “The great part about audio is that you can lie down and rest in the most comfortable position you can find while you listen.”
Heather adds, “By listening … I can concentrate on the story instead of the pain.”
AUDIO IS AVAILABLE AT ALL TIMES AND IN ALL PLACES
Chronic Joy® audio blogs are available day or night, whenever, wherever, and however we are. We can listen as we exercise, commute, fold laundry, make dinner, or cut the grass. We can also listen after settling into a comfortable spot or pouring ourselves a fresh cup of coffee. Even in the still of the night when our minds are anything but still, audio is available.
AUDIO IS AN ASSET TO THOSE WITH CHRONIC CONDITIONS, INCLUDING TRAUMA
“Concentration problems happen in all sorts of illnesses,” writes Alyssa Williamson, a psychotherapist who specializes in trauma. Conditions like:
- Visual Impairments: World Blind Union
- Depression and Anxiety: Anxiety and Depression Association of America
- Dyslexia: International Dyslexia Association
- Migraine: Migraine Again
- Meniere’s Disease: American Hearing Research Foundation
- Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD)/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD): CHADD
- Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD): Brain & Behavior Research Foundation
- Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS)/Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME): Solve CFS
- Ehlers-Danlos Syndromes (EDS)/Hypermobility Spectrum Disorders (HSSD): The Ehlers-Danlos Society
- Dysautonomia: Dysautonomia International
- Paralysis: Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation
- Autism: Autism Speaks
- Cerebral Palsy (CP): International Cerebral Palsy Society
- Stroke: World Stroke Organization
- Multiple Sclerosis: International MS Federation
- Epilepsy: Epilepsy Foundation
- Literacy: World Literacy Foundation
- Learning Disabilities: LDA – Learning Disabilities Association of America
- Developmental Disabilities: The Arc
- Symptoms such as exhaustion, weakness, brain fog, and insomnia

Even More
Free Audio Book



K-LOVE Radio Interview
Join Chronic Joy's Pamela Piquette and Susan Rodriguez, a licensed clinical social worker at Hospital for Special Surgery in New York, as they are interviewed by K-LOVE Radio’s Billie Branham on Closer Look: “Living with Chronic Illness? Advice for Faith and Family.”
CHALLENGES AND JOYS OF LIVING WITH CHRONIC ILLNESS
CHALLENGES AND JOYS OF MARRIAGE WITH CHRONIC ILLNESS
