Ep 402 Love After Losing Limbs with Kristan & Brook Seaford
Marriage Therapy Radio
MTR
4.6 • 690 Ratings
🗓️ 9 December 2025
⏱️ 44 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Zach sits down with Kristan and Brook Seaford, a couple whose marriage was transformed overnight when Kristan contracted a rare and catastrophic infection in 2013. What began as strep throat and the flu quickly escalated into pneumonia, sepsis, organ failure, septic shock, and ultimately the loss of both hands, one foot, and part of the other—a 108-day medical ordeal across six hospitals that changed her life and their family forever.
But what unfolds in this interview is not just a medical story—it’s a relationship story. Kristan describes the grief of returning home to a toddler who no longer recognized her, the ache of losing the physical abilities that once defined her identity, and the spiritual shift from fierce independence to complete dependence on God. Brook shares his own transformation as the family’s roles flipped overnight—learning to parent five children, run a home he once took for granted, and support a partner rebuilding her life.
Together, Kristan and Brook talk about humor as survival, forgiveness as practice, community as a lifeline, and the unexpected gifts that emerged from unimaginable loss. They explore how their affection, partnership, and independence have evolved, how they’ve adapted to enjoy life together in new ways, and how their children have grown stronger, more empathetic, and more capable because of what their family lived through.
Kristan now speaks publicly about resilience, faith, and healing—and this conversation demonstrates the courage and compassion at the heart of her work.
Key Takeaways
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A medical miracle and a marital transformation – Kristan survived sepsis and organ failure, losing limbs but gaining a deeper sense of gratitude, faith, and purpose.
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Roles reversed overnight – Brook shifted from traditional breadwinner to full-time caregiver and household manager, discovering new respect for the invisible labor of parenting and home life.
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Anger and grief show up differently – She grieved deeply but rarely felt anger; he felt anger for her, mourning all that had been taken from someone he loved.
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Rebuilding attachment takes intention – Their 13-month-old daughter was terrified when Kristan came home—so Kristan slept on the nursery floor for months to rebuild their bond.
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Humor is holy – Dark humor and playful banter became a coping mechanism for both the trauma and the awkward social moments that followed.
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The story shaped their kids – Their five children grew more independent, responsible, and compassionate as they adapted to new family rhythms.
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Partnership evolves – Though physical limitations changed what activities they can share, they now intentionally seek “new fun” together—breweries, museums, comedy clubs, creative classes, and cruises instead of scuba diving.
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Her disability makes her a better counselor – Kristan says she isn’t a good mom, wife, or therapist despite what happened—but in many ways because of it.
Guest Info
Kristan Seaford
Speaker, therapist, author, and survivor. Kristan shares her story of catastrophic illness, limb loss, resilience, and faith through her counseling practice and speaking engagements. Learn more at https://www.kristanseaford.com/.
Brook Seaford
Pastor, father, and caregiver whose perspective brings honesty, steadiness, and depth to the conversation.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hey everybody, welcome and thank you for listening to this episode of Marriage Therapy |
| 0:05.6 | Radio. My name is Zach Brittle, and I am delighted to bring you this conversation today with |
| 0:09.5 | Brooke and Kristen Seaford. Kristen has an incredible story of triumph, really, over some |
| 0:15.6 | kind of amazing circumstances. And the way that she and Brooke have bonded together to overcome some pretty |
| 0:22.0 | significant hardship is amazing, both for their marriage, for their roles as parents. She has |
| 0:29.2 | turned her story into a compelling platform for inspirational talks. She does some therapy, |
| 0:37.1 | and I just really appreciated the opportunity to talk to |
| 0:40.1 | them, get inside their story, appreciate a little bit of how they've turned tragedy into comedy |
| 0:43.7 | and just generally be inspired. I think you will be too. This is a very cool conversation. |
| 0:47.9 | Stick around. Well, thanks for coming on. I'm excited to talk to you guys. You have a pretty |
| 0:52.4 | incredible story it sounds like. Do you want to give us a cliff notes real quick? Sure. We had a pretty catastrophic, or I had a pretty catastrophic health issue back in 2013, I got strut throat and the flu at the same time. |
| 1:12.6 | And pretty quickly, it turned into pneumonia. |
| 1:18.6 | And then the strep bacteria got into my bloodstream, which is called sepsis. |
| 1:25.3 | And once any infection is in your bloodstream, then it's, um, it's not a great |
| 1:32.4 | prognosis. And so basically then the bacteria attacks all of your organs and kind of kills them |
| 1:41.2 | one by one. And that's exactly what happened to me. |
| 1:45.2 | And so I went into septic shock. |
| 1:47.9 | And so long story short, after 108 days and six different hospitals, |
| 1:57.2 | I came home again to my family. |
| 2:00.8 | But I was changed forever because I had lost my hands and one foot and then part of the other foot. |
| 2:11.1 | And so the reason that I ended up losing my limbs is that one of the medications they gave me is known to sometimes |
| 2:21.2 | steal the nutrients and the oxygen from your limbs to bring it to the middle of your body where |
... |
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