
In this episode, we meet Chris Sciabarra—a writer whose sense of freedom began not in the body, but in the mind. Inspired early on by thinkers like Ayn Rand and later shaped by the dialectical ideas of Bertell Ollman, Chris built an inner world grounded in reason, inquiry, and intellectual independence. But while his mind roamed freely, his body told a different story. Living with the rare condition Superior Mesenteric Artery Syndrome, Chris faced lifelong physical limitations that made everyday life a constant negotiation.
What emerges is a powerful contrast—and ultimately, a reconciliation—between independence as an idea and interdependence as a reality. Raised in a close-knit Brooklyn family, Chris’s story reveals how freedom is often sustained not alone, but through deep bonds of care and mutual support.
This is a conversation about philosophy, illness, and the quiet strength of family—the kind that makes survival, and even flourishing, possible.
I'm Léa Hirschfeld, and this is Out of Sync: exploring life through disability, one story at a time.
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Chris's blog & essays are available here :
“Born Again”: Fifty Years Ago Today (24 April 2024): https://medium.com/@cms10_7549/born-again-fifty-years-ago-today-32bd3935241c
Back to Life from the Brink (28 April 2026):
On Medium: https://medium.com/@cms10_7549/back-to-life-from-the-brink-9651105cbbc0
On Substack: https://chrismatthewsciabarra.substack.com/p/153e7046-0763-48db-b764-57e047730828
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