You did it again, Kansas City. 💙🎪
Together, we raised more than $4 million for pediatric cancer research and care at @ChildrensMercy.
From laughter and music to powerful stories like Layla's, you reminded us what Big Slick is all about: hope.
Thank you.
So good to have @SarahNauser in town for Lou Gehrig day tomorrow. The Reds are honoring her tonight. We are doing a big special tomorrow. Fun to see Brady Singer and Sarah visiting
There’s nothing like celebrating a milestone with friends, family, and cake to cure a case of the Mondays. 🎂 63 years and 16,000 episodes later, we’re still going strong thanks to all of you! Thank you so much for watching. 😊 📺 #GH#GeneralHospital
It’s a *Toy* Story 🤠
You knew it! My new original song “I Knew It, I Knew You” for Disney and @Pixar’s @toystory 5 will be yours on June 5th. I’ve always dreamed of getting to write for these characters who I’ve adored since I was a 5 year old kid watching the first Toy Story movie. I fell instantly in love with Toy Story 5 when I was lucky enough to see it in its early stages, and I wrote this song as soon as I got home from the screening. Sometimes you just know, right?
You can pre-order now exclusively at https://t.co/NoneI6kxdH and catch Toy Story 5 in theaters June 19th ☁️☁️☁️☁️☁️
Day 24
When did you receive your diagnosis of ALS?
Eight years ago today.
I sat in a small neurology clinic in Liberty and heard the words that would change my life forever. A moment permanently etched into my memory.
I was alone. Terrified. Overwhelmed with fear, uncertainty, and questions no one could truly answer. In an instant, life as I knew it split into a before and an after.
At 29 years old, I was told I had a terminal disease.
I didn’t know what the future would look like. I didn’t know how much time I had, how much I would lose, or how I was supposed to carry the weight of a diagnosis like ALS. There is no guidebook for this life. No perfect way to process it. No roadmap for surviving the unimaginable.
But eight years later, I’m still here.
I’ve endured more than I ever thought possible, but I’ve also experienced deeper love, stronger faith, greater perspective, and more meaningful connections than I could have imagined back then. ALS has taken a lot from me, but it has not taken my ability to fight, to laugh, to love, or to live a life that still holds purpose.
If that scared 29-year-old version of me could see who she would become, I think she’d be proud.
Not because this journey has been easy — it hasn’t — but because somehow, through all of it, I kept going.
And maybe that’s what courage really is. Not living without fear, but continuing to move forward in spite of it.
#Courage #ALS #FightLikeAGirl