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News, Inspiration, and Information about Coma, Stroke, Brain Injury (TBI), and Disorders of Consciousness (DoC)
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The Telepathy Tapes and Coma
The Telepathy Tapes present coma, minimal consciousness, stroke, and Alzheimer’s not as “disconnections,” but as states where the person’s mind and emotional life remain present and can sometimes still communicate beyond spoken language.
What they say about coma and minimal consciousness
The broader Telepathy Tapes framework suggests that consciousness may remain more intact than it appears externally, and that some individuals in very low‑response states can still participate in a field of shared, possibly telepathic, awareness.
Within this view, coma and disorders of consciousness are framed less as total “shut‑offs” and more as extreme communication barriers, where caregivers’ focused, loving attention and directed inner speech might still be perceived and sometimes answered through subtle shifts, dreams, or later reports when people recover.
What they say about stroke survivors
The Telepathy Tapes “Talk Tracks” explicitly extend the same idea of telepathic / nonverbal communication to stroke survivors who have lost speech.
The claim is that aphasia or paralysis may block the motor channel, but the survivor can still “push” clear affective intentions, preferences, and yes/no–type messages that close partners can learn to sense and interpret, often alongside conventional cues like eye gaze and small movements.
What they say about Alzheimer’s
Episodes and write‑ups describe spouses who begin to experiment with “felt thought” when language fades in Alzheimer’s, silently directing clear emotional messages and noticing specific, appropriately timed responses (tears, touch, gestures, shifts in expression, or sleep‑talk content).
One highlighted story (Dan and Denise) portrays late‑stage Alzheimer’s as a period where the outer narrative breaks down but a deep, wordless, sometimes telepathic, bond continues to guide care decisions, emotional reassurance, and mutual recognition.
In a nutshell:
The Telepathy Tapes “recast” coma, minimal consciousness, stroke, and Alzheimer’s as communication injuries, not relationship endings—that the series proposes a surviving inner narrator who can still be reached through presence, intention, and possibly telepathic channels, even when speech and conventional responsiveness are gone.
How to Watch and Listen to The Telepathy Tapes
If you’re curious about The Telepathy Tapes and want to dive in, the series is available across most major platforms, so you can plug into it however you normally consume long-form stories.
You can stream it via the official Telepathy Tapes site, which also links out to the main podcast and video platforms. The full series is released as a podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, Audible, iHeart, and other standard podcast apps under the title The Telepathy Tapes. On YouTube, you’ll find episodes and season playlists on the official channel, which is ideal if you prefer a more visual, lean‑back experience.
For people who want to go deeper, there is also premium / bonus content (often branded as Backstage Pass or similar) that offers extended interviews and behind‑the‑scenes material, usually linked from the show descriptions and main site.