Hoppa till huvudinnehåll
Lyndsy Burrow

Lindsey Burrow om kärlek, vårdande och livet efter förlust

Some stories change the way a country talks about illness, love and resilience. Not because they are extraordinary in a sensational sense, but because they reveal what happens inside ordinary families when life becomes unimaginably hard.

Matt Jameson and Christine Talbot sit down with Lindsey Burrow, mother, campaigner and the devoted wife of Rob Burrow. Together, Rob and Lindsey became the public face of love in the face of motor neurone disease. Their story moved millions not because it sought attention, but because it showed what commitment, dignity and compassion look like when everything else is stripped away.

This conversation is not simply about loss. It is about caring, endurance, identity and what it means to keep showing up for the people you love when the future becomes uncertain.

Lindsey Burrow: Strength Through the Storm

When illness enters a family

Lindsey speaks openly about the moment Rob was diagnosed in 2019, and how quickly life changed. Plans dissolved. Certainty vanished. In its place came a need to adapt, to learn, and to live with constant uncertainty.

She describes how serious illness reshapes the everyday. How decisions once taken for granted suddenly carry weight. How fear and hope can exist side by side. How the role of partner slowly expands to include carer, advocate and protector. For many families living with long term or life limiting conditions, her words will feel painfully familiar.

There is no attempt to soften the reality. Lindsey talks about exhaustion, about anticipatory grief, and about the emotional toll of watching someone you love lose abilities they once took for granted. She also speaks about the quiet moments of connection that illness does not take away. The shared looks, the humour, the determination to live fully in the present.

Caring for someone you love

Caregiving sits at the heart of this conversation. Lindsey reflects on how caring for Rob became an act of love expressed through practical, daily effort. Supporting communication. Managing physical needs. Advocating within healthcare systems. Creating safety and dignity in a body that was changing.

She also speaks honestly about how easy it is for carers to disappear from view. The focus understandably rests on the person who is ill, yet the emotional and physical health of carers is often stretched to its limits. Lindsey’s story highlights the importance of recognising carers as individuals with their own needs, emotions and limits.

Her reflections gently underline a truth that many carers struggle to admit. You can love deeply and still feel overwhelmed. You can be strong and still need support. Acknowledging that is not a failure. It is part of staying well enough to keep going.

Parenting through uncertainty

Alongside caring for Rob, Lindsey was raising three young children. She talks about the challenge of protecting their childhood while living with a progressive illness in the family. About answering questions honestly without taking away hope. About modelling courage while allowing space for sadness.

This part of the conversation is especially powerful. It shows how illness does not happen in isolation. It affects partners, children and extended families, shaping emotional development, resilience and understanding of the world. Lindsey’s experience speaks to the importance of emotional openness, reassurance and routine when children are living alongside serious illness.

Grief as an ongoing health journey

Rob Burrow died in 2024. Lindsey speaks with clarity and gentleness about what followed. The loss of the person she loved. The loss of the role she had lived within for years. The silence that comes after constant care.

She does not frame grief as something to be overcome. Instead, she describes it as something that becomes part of life, influencing sleep, concentration, energy and emotional balance. She talks about learning how to exist again as an individual, while still honouring the love and the life she shared with Rob.

Her reflections echo what many people experience after bereavement. Grief is not linear. It does not follow timetables. It surfaces unexpectedly. It requires patience, compassion and support. Lindsey’s honesty offers reassurance to anyone navigating loss that there is no correct way to grieve.

Continuing a shared mission

Although Rob is no longer here, Lindsey continues the work they began together. She uses her voice to raise awareness of motor neurone disease, to support families living with the condition, and to keep Rob’s message alive. A message rooted in courage, positivity and refusing to give up on connection.

She speaks about purpose not as something grand, but as something quietly sustaining. Turning pain into action. Using lived experience to help others feel less alone. Finding meaning while carrying grief.

Patientval för Yorkshire-samtal

Claire Warren om moderskap, mammaskuld och att släppa perfektion

Podcaster

Claire Warren om moderskap, mammaskuld och att släppa perfektion

Modern moderskap kan kännas överväldigande. Råden är oändliga, förväntningarna är höga, och pressen att få allt rätt kan tyst urholka självförtroende och välbefinnande. Detta avsnitt av Yorkshire Talks erbjuder något som många föräldrar sällan får. Tillåtelse att andas. Matt Jameson och Christine Talbot får sällskap av Claire Warren, den prisbelönta skaparen bakom My Kinda Mum. Med mer än en halv miljon följare på Instagram och Facebook har Claire byggt upp en gemenskap kring ärliga, roliga och djupt relaterbara reflektioner om föräldraskap. Inte den polerade versionen. Den verkliga. Denna konversation är varm, uppriktig och lugnande. Den utforskar moderskap som det faktiskt levs, rörigt, glädjefyllt, utmattande och ofta fullt av självtvivel.

av Thomas Andrew Porteus, MBCS

Danny Malin om hälsa, balans och livet bortom viral berömmelse

Podcaster

Danny Malin om hälsa, balans och livet bortom viral berömmelse

När Danny Malin först dök upp på Yorkshire Talks, mötte tittarna en man i ett ögonblick av enorm förändring. Tillsammans med sin fru Sophie Malin och deras lilla dotter Athena Malin, talade Danny öppet om att bli pappa, hantera plötslig berömmelse och de påfrestningar som kom med att bli igenkänd överallt han gick. Nu återvänder Danny för Säsong Två, och denna konversation känns annorlunda. Tystare, mer reflekterande och rotad i hälsa, välbefinnande och vad det innebär att lyssna på sin kropp när livet börjar kräva för mycket.

av Thomas Andrew Porteus, MBCS

Om författarenVisa fullständig biografi

Författarbild

Thomas Andrew Porteus, MBCS

Hälsoteknik

MBCS

Thomas skriver för att informera, inspirera och utrusta praktikledare och vårdpersonal som navigerar förändringar, med utgångspunkt i två decennier av praktiskt arbete inom det brittiska hälsosystemet.

Artikelhistorik

Informationen på denna sida är granskad av kvalificerade kliniker.

influensaberättigandekontroll

Fråga, dela, anslut.

Bläddra i diskussioner, ställ frågor och dela erfarenheter inom hundratals hälsorelaterade ämnen.

symptomkontroll

Känner du dig sjuk?

Bedöm dina symtom online gratis

Anmäl dig till Patientens nyhetsbrev

Din veckovisa dos av tydliga, pålitliga hälsoråd - skrivna för att hjälpa dig känna dig informerad, självsäker och i kontroll.

Vänligen ange en giltig e-postadress

Genom att prenumerera accepterar du våra Sekretesspolicy. Du kan avsluta prenumerationen när som helst. Vi säljer aldrig dina uppgifter.