Guest guest Posted April 19, 2005 Report Share Posted April 19, 2005 I have been pondering this statement: " Nobody would deny that multiple sclerosis can be an extremely unpleasant and disabling illness to live with. But so can ME/chronic fatigue syndrome. " It's so sad, that suffering becomes a contest, with the victims of one plague saying " we are every bit as miserable as the victims of that other plague, over there. " Are such grotesque comparisons necessary? Do they arise as inevitable expressions of our collective insufficiency, our inability as human beings to cope with suffering in all its forms? Or is there something more specific at work, a world view that reduces suffering to a problem to be solved, by the focused application of scarce resources? So that suffering, while it may gain a remedy here and there, loses all of its dignity? I don't know. I know that the better part of my character turns away in shame, when desperately ill people treat the long search for healing as a horserace. The patient with ME is prone to saying " You can't imagine, from looking at me, or what you read about my disease in the media, the suffering I am subject to. " This is very likely the truth, about ME, and MS, and Lyme disease, and a host of other poorly understood illnesses that do not manifest with obvious physical signs. Needless to say, one consequence of that truth is that I cannot say, about someone who suffers from one of these diseases, 'my suffering is the equal of yours.' How on earth would I know that?' The relativity of hardship, to some abstracted third party who is making comparisons, does nothing to change the absolute nature of that same same hardship, for the person who suffers it. Suffering does not abide in the space between us, where a person must stand to make such comparisons, but in the space within us, which wisdom teaches us to regard as holy ground. Modern medicine, couched in a world view that sees life as competition for scarce resources, has little understanding of these things. We want to know why this institution treats us so badly, to see ourselves through its eyes. Perhaps this is how we go astray. Because if we allow ourselves to view life through that lens our vision is badly degraded. We want to say to modern medicine, " Be fair, be consistent, apply the same principle to our suffering that you do to everyone else's. " We are not going to transform this falllen institution into an embodiment of compassion. At best, we might succeed in confronting it with its own contradictions, but even that is tricky. We never know which way an institution so divided will turn, to resolve internal conflicts. Modern medicine might very well say, " Yes, you are just as bad off as those people with MS, and the truth is we can do nothing much for any of you, except divert research and treatment dollars from people who are far more likely to benefit from them. " In a darker mood, modern medicine might reply, " Yes, you are all miserable, because you are all so poorly equipped genetically to cope with the requirements of life today that the kindest thing would be to euthanize the lot of you, protecting the gene pool from any further repitition of your woes. " At a minimum, we need to be very specific about WHICH principle it is, that we would like to see applied fairly and consistently to all cases. Would it be " first, do no harm? " I think not, because that principle has become like an umbrella of neglect, which keeps the rain from falling on the just and the unjust, the truly miserable and the merely derelict, alike. Or is our purpose to introduce a new principle? Perhaps we want to say " Life is more than respiration. We may still be breathing, but we have surely lost our lives. " Why then do we matter? If our lives with this illness are not really LIFE, can they not be disposed of lightly? We patients, too, have our contradictions, which must be confronted. We start out aware that modern medicine takes a degraded and degrading view of our suffering. That is an accurate perception, one that speaks volumes about the nature of the institution. But then, since we are still hoping that institution will deliver us, we switch gears, speaking as if it were not wrong in its outlook but only mistaken in its particulars. 'Ah, you see, you have confused us with some other undeserving group, and failed to see how closely we resemble those you favor with your gifts.' Some part of us that knows enough to stay in the shadows thinks " well, after all, not everyone can be cured, someone's suffering is bound to be discounted, but I'll be damned if it's going to be mine. " We're all damned, when we think like that. Not so long ago it was fashionable for people with CFS to cite a study comparing their 'misery index' to that of someone in the late stages of AIDS. Then a study was released, indicating that some 85 million Africans will perish of AIDS over the next decade, unless something more is done. People of good taste stopped using that argument. Human beings are limited creatures. Modern human beings have less clarity about what limits apply to them than any previous generation of mankind. Perhaps we can do anything we like, or perhaps we cannot do anything at all except conform to the pressures that bear in on us. We seem always in doubt which it is. One of the limits we do well to remember is this: we can really only take in one human being at a time. When we try to devise 'systems' for overcoming this limitation, they are invariably dehumanizing. A well designed system finds a way to put the individual human being back at the center of things, to give back with one hand what it has taken away with another. This is why bureaucracies have both broad rules, which they apply more or less blindly, without distinction, and an appeals process that puts the question back in the context of a single human life. When appeals are routinely denied, bureaucrats will try to tell themselves that this is because the rule in question is both necessary and just. We all know better. Bureaucracy can only be reconciled to human dignity when citizens - individual human beings who know they live in each other's debt - give a 'second hearing' to petitions that have been unjustly denied, and subject bureaucracy's 'first princples' to 'second thoughts.' It is to this forum that all ill-favored petitions must ultimately be addressed. We preserve our dignity by not groveling before a 'higher authority' but speaking on the level with people who are after all human beings like ourselves. Keeping these things in mind may help us to avoid horrors like " my suffering is worth just as much as his! " > > Letter to The Guardian from The ME Association: > > Editor > > Nobody would deny that multiple sclerosis can be an extremely > unpleasant and disabling illness to live with. But so can ME/chronic > fatigue syndrome. > > Having described how the neurological symptoms of the two illnesses > can be extremely similar, and thus lead to prolonged diagnostic > uncertainty, it was unfortunate that Georgina then went on > to perpetuate some of the disparaging attitudes and myths that > surround ME. > > The World Health Organisation classifies ME as a genuine > neurological disease - as does the Department of Health. And several > research studies which have examined the effects of ME on > overall quality of life have confirmed that levels of disability can > be even more severe than found in people with relapsing/remitting > multiple sclerosis (reference provided below). > > Yours sincerely > > Dr Shepherd > > Medical Adviser, The ME Association Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 19, 2005 Report Share Posted April 19, 2005 , a truism is, there is no 'minor' surgery when it's being performed on oneself. At the conference I mentioned going to this weekend there was a man in a wheelchair with transverse myelitis. He was in pretty good spirits for his situation and actively searching for cures all these years. He said, his definition of, how bad is it, is: If you can walk and you can pee, it's not that bad. Obviously he can't do either. I felt for him. And yet, my own suffering is MY OWN and I rage and cry against it daily and I consider that a sign of my spiritual/emotional HEALTH ultimately, no matter what anybody else may think. After getting my IVIG yesterday (only 5 grams) I can sometimes feel myself into who I am without chronic infection, and remember that self. I was listening to a Randy song on my Ipod and walking to the new Wholefoods (huge healthfood supermarket) and the spring sky was extremely beautiful in the early evening light, and I wanted my entire old self back. The one that moves in sync with the moment entirely in my own way and that takes life on my own terms, the one that catches the attention of men of all ages as I walk (and yesterday, partly becauseof the beautiful weather probably which changes everybody's moods, that was happening--I am sure you'll understand as I've seen your art on that website)...the one that might choose any flavor of experience that seems appropriate and real and deep at the moment...to lose this has been immense, and that is the real loss, not this pain or that pain or exhaustion or malaise or feeling toxic/poisoned or whatever symptom complex arises and disappears. So I don't think that letter was about comparisons. It was about loss, pure and simple, asking loss to be recognized. Also MS is studied (tho probably wrongly turfed solely into neurology) and there are drugs for it and being developed for it. These other diseases are wastebasket and more ignored. Doctors can't be responsible for so much loss, especially since they're pawns between the insurance and pharma industries... Everybody has their own way of dealing with stuff. Some say, we are spiritually whole no matter what. I say, every day, I resent and decry and hate that anything has been taken from me and I fight it and it's wrong and its unfair and I want life back on my terms. By the way, YOU SHOULD DO HYPERBARIC!!! WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR? See I am going to bug you because I know it will make a difference. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 19, 2005 Report Share Posted April 19, 2005 I agree with Jill, - your thoughts are a good read in their own right but I dont see them applying really to this letter/situation. MS and many other such diseases just really *are* recognized by people, whereas idiopathic fatigue/malaise absent clear objective clinical signs, be it ever so severe, has consistently been attributed to excessive masturbation, cessation of masturbation (in the 1930s... but likely later on too), poor charecter, " repression " , whatever. Ive read the most terrible accounts, which I presume are probably true, of a little australian girl being institutionalized and forced to exercise, having her complaints ignored and rejected as a treatment technique - this in our own time. ME is still mistreated horrednously in europe especially on a very broad basis - and in the US CFS is scoffed at on TV comedies, which really ends up detrimenting people in concrete ways, such as thier access to medicine. So I think the comparison to MS does have to be made publically for pragmatic reasons. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 19, 2005 Report Share Posted April 19, 2005 An interesting socio-historical note: I dont know what data this claim is based on, but I read on some webpage that in the early 20th century men had a significantly higher MS dx rate than women, because women were likely to be alternatively dx'd with " hysteria. " Whereas now many more women are dx'd, as is the case with most of the idiopathic chronic diseases. I hear men with MS may more readily develop a primary or secondary progressive course, which could also be a significant factor in this bit of history. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 19, 2005 Report Share Posted April 19, 2005 Good morning, Jill, All sorts of seeds take root in suffering's fertile soil. It is not where I would have chosen to plant my garden, but here I am. Now and then I see something trying to grow here that offends me so deeply I am not satisfied pulling it out, but want to say " keep those seeds away from my garden, damn it! " Yes, I know exactly what you mean. Spring is in the air here in Santa Cruz, too. You are exactly right when you say " it's MY suffering. " That is how suffering is. Personal and yet not, an onslaught of impersonal forces that undermines the experience of personhood. Each human being's suffering is 'different', but no one's suffering 'defines' them. Defining us is the one thing that a disease, or any other impersonal force - cannot do. Why else do we feel these things as intrusions, when they come to dominate our lives? They are oblivious to our personhood, and oblivion is more threatening, even, than death, an almost retroactive cancellation of the promise that came into the world the day we were born. Yet we do define our suffering, we give it a definite character, we present it to others in definite terms. The question is whether we do that in a way that reflects our personhood, or the forces that work to thwart it. That's all I was trying to get at. There are two things in close conflict, and we need to pay attention to which of them is speaking, when we open our mouths. Because suffering is universal, and personhood is always in danger, it is conceivable that other human beings will comprehend our need for help. We must be careful not to speak in a way that eclipses that possibility, not to preface a plea for understanding with 'of course, there is no way in hell you will ever understand'. We are the displaced, uprooted by hardship from the ground of personhood. Yet we are not really displaced, or we would not suffer so. If the roots were not still alive and partly intact, feeling them severed (I feel it, I feel it as I type this) would not cause us so much pain. That continuing contact with what it means to be a living human being is quite literally all we have at our disposal, if our goal is to call other human beings to assist us. We cannot afford to squander even a penny of it, by invoking a contest to see whose fate is the unfairest of them all. I would say even the appearance of that puts us badly over-budget. There is still something precious, that cries out to be preserved, in your life and mine. A unique potential, a way of being in the world that cannot be replicated. We want to save that! We fear that others can neither comprehend nor value it. Those feelings get overlayed on the disease. It becomes the disease whose particular qualities must be noted and valued. Nonsense. The disease, with all its particulars, is an excellent candidate for oblivion. Let it vanish, and take its particulars with it! Of course those particulars matter, to us, because we live with them. They matter, medically, as manifestations which may help to unlock the cure. They do not matter in any other way. We do not want to make a cult around them, excluding everything that doesn't fit their parameters, maintaining their purity. How does the person who made that statement know, that MS and ME are not the same disease? He doesn't. I would rather he not make his plea on my behalf by taking out a measuring stick, as if we were talking about two known quantities. I would rather that no one, ever, advocate for me by making arrogant assumptions. It's not that your point isn't valid, Jill. Of course it matters what the speaker's intentions are. But it also matters what he says, and I don't like what he says. If his purpose is good, his words fail to do justice to it. We have been done such injustice by others, it no doubt can sound trifling or unfair to worry loudly about the injustices we may do to others, or ourselves. But that is the realm where I have power, Jill. That is the realm where in spite of everything you and I have lost we continue to have choices to make. I don't mean to sound high and mighty, but I do mean to say that I am not so low and weak that I no longer care what comes out of my mouth. PS: I do have just a handful of things other than the hyperbaric treatment to attend to, but hope that won't deter you from continuing to remind me. I take time out to write about whatever catches my imagination, because that is how a sickly scha remembers that he's alive. > > , a truism is, there is no 'minor' surgery when it's being > performed on oneself. > > At the conference I mentioned going to this weekend there was a man > in a wheelchair with transverse myelitis. He was in pretty good > spirits for his situation and actively searching for cures all these > years. He said, his definition of, how bad is it, is: If you can walk > and you can pee, it's not that bad. Obviously he can't do either. > > I felt for him. And yet, my own suffering is MY OWN and I rage and > cry against it daily and I consider that a sign of my > spiritual/emotional HEALTH ultimately, no matter what anybody else > may think. After getting my IVIG yesterday (only 5 grams) I can > sometimes feel myself into who I am without chronic infection, and > remember that self. I was listening to a Randy song on my Ipod > and walking to the new Wholefoods (huge healthfood supermarket) and > the spring sky was extremely beautiful in the early evening light, > and I wanted my entire old self back. The one that moves in sync with > the moment entirely in my own way and that takes life on my own > terms, the one that catches the attention of men of all ages as I > walk (and yesterday, partly becauseof the beautiful weather probably > which changes everybody's moods, that was happening--I am sure you'll > understand as I've seen your art on that website)...the one that > might choose any flavor of experience that seems appropriate and real > and deep at the moment...to lose this has been immense, and that is > the real loss, not this pain or that pain or exhaustion or malaise or > feeling toxic/poisoned or whatever symptom complex arises and > disappears. > > So I don't think that letter was about comparisons. It was about > loss, pure and simple, asking loss to be recognized. Also MS is > studied (tho probably wrongly turfed solely into neurology) and there > are drugs for it and being developed for it. These other diseases are > wastebasket and more ignored. > > Doctors can't be responsible for so much loss, especially since > they're pawns between the insurance and pharma industries... > > Everybody has their own way of dealing with stuff. Some say, we are > spiritually whole no matter what. I say, every day, I resent and > decry and hate that anything has been taken from me and I fight it > and it's wrong and its unfair and I want life back on my terms. > > By the way, YOU SHOULD DO HYPERBARIC!!! WHAT ARE YOU WAITING FOR? > See I am going to bug you because I know it will make a difference. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 19, 2005 Report Share Posted April 19, 2005 , if what you say here is what the author meant, he would have done better to use your words, than his. Do you notice how in evoking the horror of how this illness is treated, you at no point are forced to quantify any other form of suffering? No one knows how, exactly, but when we know what we mean, we usually manage to say it. I put it to you that too often we do not know what we mean. > > I agree with Jill, - your thoughts are a good read in their own > right but I dont see them applying really to this letter/situation. > > MS and many other such diseases just really *are* recognized by > people, whereas idiopathic fatigue/malaise absent clear objective > clinical signs, be it ever so severe, has consistently been attributed > to excessive masturbation, cessation of masturbation (in the 1930s... > but likely later on too), poor charecter, " repression " , whatever. Ive > read the most terrible accounts, which I presume are probably true, of > a little australian girl being institutionalized and forced to > exercise, having her complaints ignored and rejected as a treatment > technique - this in our own time. ME is still mistreated horrednously > in europe especially on a very broad basis - and in the US CFS is > scoffed at on TV comedies, which really ends up detrimenting people in > concrete ways, such as thier access to medicine. So I think the > comparison to MS does have to be made publically for pragmatic reasons. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 19, 2005 Report Share Posted April 19, 2005 Oh gosh ... Each of us deals with our situation in our own way. I don't have too much energy to philosophize beyond understanding that the universe is creative, therefore allows room for random mutation, error, thus personal suffering of all kinds, and has no empathy for us. A spectacle, sublime, sometimes terrible, etc, as ph Conrad says (I paraphrase). I don't WANT MY OWN SUFFERING and so I fight against it. Others have different ways. I stay mad, and also cry. I have no desire to accept it. It has taken a lot from me. I refuse to say it has given me a lot, too. No, I just do the best I can. The problem for me, is there are certain things I never cared too much about. I didn't need a big home, fancy car, lots of possessions, I'm happy with what I have, but I needed always the freedom to take the universe in on my own terms and shape it and create something out of that experience. And lyme has tried to take that from me every moment. I've won against it so far. I should mention yesterday that with the gamma freshly in me, I could feel " it " lurking underneath. I don't know what " it " is and could variously call it bad genes, infection with lyme or something else (maybe its just lyme), or sorcery of some karmic kind. Whatever " it " is, it was " mad " that it was temporarily squelched by the cottony plushness of gamma globulin. It does NOT want me to win. I am determined to win. Everybody does it their own way. I find no meaning in my suffering. It is a friggin' bore. Boring is the worst. YOu see I have posted you about the chambers. The other things you are attending to would not be as helpful to you, imho...(humble opinion) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 19, 2005 Report Share Posted April 19, 2005 When I read your remarks, Jill, I really related. I am so mad that I cannot grow the way I want to because of this disease. I WANT to be grateful for the things that this disease has taught me but at the moment I am mostly mad because my efforts at growth are stifled by this exhaustion. It is hard for me to be balanced because the giving in to my creativity requires that I use energy from my already depleted reserves even though the creativity itself comes from an unlimited source. Or maybe there is something that I am just not getting yet. Maybe it is that giving in and giving up are erroneously the same in my mind? OK, now I don't even understand what I just said. I guess my words just mean that I am struggling with the meaning of all this and I am too exhausted to even put it into words. I want to accomplish something with my life and grow spiritually but at the moment I have to give up and rest. God that is hard. It makes me so mad. Marie --- jill1313 <jenbooks13@...> wrote: > > Oh gosh ... > Each of us deals with our situation in our own way. > I don't have too much energy to philosophize beyond > understanding > that the universe is creative, therefore allows room > for random > mutation, error, thus personal suffering of all > kinds, and has no > empathy for us. A spectacle, sublime, sometimes > terrible, etc, as > ph Conrad says (I paraphrase). > > I don't WANT MY OWN SUFFERING and so I fight against > it. Others have > different ways. I stay mad, and also cry. I have no > desire to accept > it. It has taken a lot from me. I refuse to say it > has given me a > lot, too. No, I just do the best I can. The problem > for me, is there > are certain things I never cared too much about. I > didn't need a big > home, fancy car, lots of possessions, I'm happy with > what I have, but > I needed always the freedom to take the universe in > on my own terms > and shape it and create something out of that > experience. And lyme > has tried to take that from me every moment. I've > won against it so > far. I should mention yesterday that with the gamma > freshly in me, I > could feel " it " lurking underneath. I don't know > what " it " is and > could variously call it bad genes, infection with > lyme or something > else (maybe its just lyme), or sorcery of some > karmic kind. > Whatever " it " is, it was " mad " that it was > temporarily squelched by > the cottony plushness of gamma globulin. It does NOT > want me to win. > I am determined to win. > > Everybody does it their own way. I find no meaning > in my suffering. > It is a friggin' bore. Boring is the worst. > > YOu see I have posted you about the chambers. The > other things you > are attending to would not be as helpful to you, > imho...(humble > opinion) > > > > __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2005 Report Share Posted April 20, 2005 Giving in, in the sense of luxuriating in a hot bath or in the peace of your bed/sanctuary of home...or enjoying a beautiful spring day and quietly appreciating the tree blossoms (all of which I've done recently!) is okay. But giving in, in the sense of, not looking as hard as ever for answers, that is not allowed . One of the qi gong masters at the conference said think of it as your associate or your friend if you can, telling you this or that, lesson to learn etc etc. I know she means well but though I entertained the idea that day, I don't want to. Now, she also pointed out there is a way to be positive, and it will strengthen my immune system. " I could use 95% more energy today " is positive, " I feel lousy " is not. I agree with her and mean to try harder in that regard. However, think of it as your enemy, that is my counsel! It wants to stop your creativity. It is virulent, vituperative, and wants to blot out the light. You must never let it take your creativity away. That's why I loved what Wells wrote on her website (she wrote the divine secrets of the ya ya sisterhood). She waited for her packets of energy. They were small. And they came, and she wrote. Creativity is on your side. It is stronger than the darkness. But you have to fight with everything inside you. > > > > Oh gosh ... > > Each of us deals with our situation in our own way. > > I don't have too much energy to philosophize beyond > > understanding > > that the universe is creative, therefore allows room > > for random > > mutation, error, thus personal suffering of all > > kinds, and has no > > empathy for us. A spectacle, sublime, sometimes > > terrible, etc, as > > ph Conrad says (I paraphrase). > > > > I don't WANT MY OWN SUFFERING and so I fight against > > it. Others have > > different ways. I stay mad, and also cry. I have no > > desire to accept > > it. It has taken a lot from me. I refuse to say it > > has given me a > > lot, too. No, I just do the best I can. The problem > > for me, is there > > are certain things I never cared too much about. I > > didn't need a big > > home, fancy car, lots of possessions, I'm happy with > > what I have, but > > I needed always the freedom to take the universe in > > on my own terms > > and shape it and create something out of that > > experience. And lyme > > has tried to take that from me every moment. I've > > won against it so > > far. I should mention yesterday that with the gamma > > freshly in me, I > > could feel " it " lurking underneath. I don't know > > what " it " is and > > could variously call it bad genes, infection with > > lyme or something > > else (maybe its just lyme), or sorcery of some > > karmic kind. > > Whatever " it " is, it was " mad " that it was > > temporarily squelched by > > the cottony plushness of gamma globulin. It does NOT > > want me to win. > > I am determined to win. > > > > Everybody does it their own way. I find no meaning > > in my suffering. > > It is a friggin' bore. Boring is the worst. > > > > YOu see I have posted you about the chambers. The > > other things you > > are attending to would not be as helpful to you, > > imho...(humble > > opinion) > > > > > > > > > > __________________________________________________ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2005 Report Share Posted April 20, 2005 Jill, Thank You-your counsel is priceless at the moment. The words have a lot of relevance to where I am at right now. I am going to print this off. I struggle with keeping positive and this will help me remember to try harder. Marie --- jill1313 <jenbooks13@...> wrote: > > Giving in, in the sense of luxuriating in a hot bath > or in the peace > of your bed/sanctuary of home...or enjoying a > beautiful spring day > and quietly appreciating the tree blossoms (all of > which I've done > recently!) is okay. But giving in, in the sense of, > not looking as > hard as ever for answers, that is not allowed . > > One of the qi gong masters at the conference said > think of it as your > associate or your friend if you can, telling you > this or that, lesson > to learn etc etc. > > I know she means well but though I entertained the > idea that day, I > don't want to. Now, she also pointed out there is a > way to be > positive, and it will strengthen my immune system. > " I could use 95% > more energy today " is positive, " I feel lousy " is > not. I agree with > her and mean to try harder in that regard. > > However, think of it as your enemy, that is my > counsel! It wants to > stop your creativity. It is virulent, vituperative, > and wants to blot > out the light. You must never let it take your > creativity away. > That's why I loved what Wells wrote on her > website (she wrote > the divine secrets of the ya ya sisterhood). She > waited for her > packets of energy. They were small. And they came, > and she wrote. > > Creativity is on your side. It is stronger than the > darkness. But you > have to fight with everything inside you. > > > > > > > > Oh gosh ... > > > Each of us deals with our situation in our own > way. > > > I don't have too much energy to philosophize > beyond > > > understanding > > > that the universe is creative, therefore allows > room > > > for random > > > mutation, error, thus personal suffering of all > > > kinds, and has no > > > empathy for us. A spectacle, sublime, sometimes > > > terrible, etc, as > > > ph Conrad says (I paraphrase). > > > > > > I don't WANT MY OWN SUFFERING and so I fight > against > > > it. Others have > > > different ways. I stay mad, and also cry. I have > no > > > desire to accept > > > it. It has taken a lot from me. I refuse to say > it > > > has given me a > > > lot, too. No, I just do the best I can. The > problem > > > for me, is there > > > are certain things I never cared too much about. > I > > > didn't need a big > > > home, fancy car, lots of possessions, I'm happy > with > > > what I have, but > > > I needed always the freedom to take the universe > in > > > on my own terms > > > and shape it and create something out of that > > > experience. And lyme > > > has tried to take that from me every moment. > I've > > > won against it so > > > far. I should mention yesterday that with the > gamma > > > freshly in me, I > > > could feel " it " lurking underneath. I don't know > > > what " it " is and > > > could variously call it bad genes, infection > with > > > lyme or something > > > else (maybe its just lyme), or sorcery of some > > > karmic kind. > > > Whatever " it " is, it was " mad " that it was > > > temporarily squelched by > > > the cottony plushness of gamma globulin. It does > NOT > > > want me to win. > > > I am determined to win. > > > > > > Everybody does it their own way. I find no > meaning > > > in my suffering. > > > It is a friggin' bore. Boring is the worst. > > > > > > YOu see I have posted you about the chambers. > The > > > other things you > > > are attending to would not be as helpful to you, > > > imho...(humble > > > opinion) > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > __________________________________________________ > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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