Listen again - James and Braith

17/10/2025 19 min
Listen again - James and Braith

Listen "Listen again - James and Braith"

Episode Synopsis

Send us a textA family finds a way through a system that too often blocks the very basics. James and his son, Braith, talk candidly about becoming homeless, paying monthly to store the things that make a house feel like home, and the long wait for essential adaptations that would let Braith live safely and independently. Their story is grounded in the realities many people face right now: age-based housing criteria that don’t fit need, carers without bus passes in Greater Manchester, and the strain of choosing between a van to retrieve furniture and food for the week.What shines is their resilience—and Hannah, the seizure-alert dog who changed everything. With a 20–30 minute warning window, medicine can be prepared and injuries averted, turning nine seizures a day into a few a month. We explore how a local affordable food hub and a partnership with Sale Moor Community Partnership helped them break the storage trap, secure white goods, and rebuild routines. Braith, a former award-winning sound designer, offers a moving lens on joy as a soundscape: the warmth of evening streets, the laughter of strangers, and the rare days when health, money, and transport align.We also unpack the systems-level gaps that keep people indoors—slow adaptations, retrospective building costs, and funding promises that vanish—alongside the small interventions that make a big difference: neighbours who know your name, hubs close enough to walk to, and support that arrives when it’s actually needed. It’s a human story about access, dignity, and the power of community to turn coping into progress.Subscribe for more honest, ground-level stories. Share this episode with someone working in housing, health, or local government, and leave a review to help others find it.