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Re: Recovered! (long)

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This is absoulutely outstanding, Nell and n. Bravo!

René

>

> It's a happy, happy day at my house. I took n in for a

> reassessment, because he's been doing so well -- and the shrink

> agreed, saying he no longer has any diagnosis. That no one would ever

> know he had ever had autism.

>

>.

>

> Nell

>

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That's great! Congrats! How old is n?

>

> It's a happy, happy day at my house. I took n in for a

> reassessment, because he's been doing so well -- and the shrink

> agreed, saying he no longer has any diagnosis. That no one would

ever

> know he had ever had autism.

>

> Here's the short version of his story (sorry for the repetition

> old-timers)...By the time n was 3 he was sick all the time and

> mostly miserable. Hit himself in the head a lot, cried a LOT,

> aggressive towards his baby sister, couldn't handle any self-care

jobs

> like dressing himself, often didn't respond when his name was

called

> or when spoken to, many many sensory difficulties. His language was

> advanced, but he would throw tantrums if someone's grammar was

> incorrect. He couldn't handle change at all, and once screamed for

> days because I rearranged the furniture in his sister's room. At

> preschool he didn't speak to anyone for months, and I don't think

he

> ever initiated conversation in the 2 years he was there, but sat by

> himself sometimes watching the others play. At home he had serial

> meltdowns, terrible rages, and threatened to kill everyone in the

> family. He was suicidal during kindergarten.

>

> Eventually he was diagnosed with Asperger's by a developmental ped,

> and with PDD by a psychiatrist.

>

> When he was 4.5 I started him on the Feingold diet and Houston

> enzymes. They were incredibly important -- although he was still a

> mess most of the time, we saw plenty of glimmers of the child he

was

> meant to be, moments of empathy, mornings when he would get dressed

> and ready for school by himself, some sense of humor.

>

> When he was 5 I started chelating him, Andy's protocol, DMSA/ALA or

> ALA only. He responded on the first round, going up to a kid on the

> playground, introducing himself (!!) and going off to play. He'd

never

> done anything *remotely like that before. He began spontaneously

> waving hello and goodbye for the first time. After 5 months of

> chelation, I did the ViraStop trial, which also gave tremendous

> improvement, socially and intellectually. His reading took off, he

> seemed much more comfortable in his skin.

>

> I will say from the beginning of starting this biomed path it has

been

> one giant rollercoaster. I'd see some great new improvement, and

think

> whew, guess this autism thing is over! and then the next day he'd

be

> worse off than before. Sometimes he'd be in bad shape for weeks at

a

> time. But slowly, slowly, over many bottles of enzymes and a

zillion

> supps and now 67 rounds, the good days are finally how he is every

day.

>

> Even though the dx is removed, we're not done yet. He still has

> intolerances to artificials, he still, STILL! gets yeast from not

that

> much sugar. I expect to do 100 rounds, and probably some more

courses

> of antivirals.

>

> But it was a thrill to watch him walk into the shrink's office,

> comfortable with himself, chatty, smiling, wanting to show her a

game

> he'd just gotten. And also -- the shrink now believes in biomed!

She

> kept shaking her head and smiling, and saying, " It's just

> unbelievable! " So I gave her Andy's books and " Evidence of Harm " ,

and

> she just may show up here.

>

> My deepest thanks to Mandi and Dana and Andy and Moria, and

everyone

> else here. n and I really owe his recovery to your work, your

> guidance and wisdom. And occasional kicks in the pants! Thank you

so much.

>

> Nell

>

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Good for you and n! I agree with the rollercoater, but the

important thing is that we keep moving forward, just as n has

done.

Ruth

>

> It's a happy, happy day at my house. I took n in for a

> reassessment, because he's been doing so well -- and the shrink

> agreed, saying he no longer has any diagnosis. That no one would

ever

> know he had ever had autism.

>

> Here's the short version of his story (sorry for the repetition

> old-timers)...By the time n was 3 he was sick all the time and

> mostly miserable. Hit himself in the head a lot, cried a LOT,

> aggressive towards his baby sister, couldn't handle any self-care

jobs

> like dressing himself, often didn't respond when his name was

called

> or when spoken to, many many sensory difficulties. His language was

> advanced, but he would throw tantrums if someone's grammar was

> incorrect. He couldn't handle change at all, and once screamed for

> days because I rearranged the furniture in his sister's room. At

> preschool he didn't speak to anyone for months, and I don't think

he

> ever initiated conversation in the 2 years he was there, but sat by

> himself sometimes watching the others play. At home he had serial

> meltdowns, terrible rages, and threatened to kill everyone in the

> family. He was suicidal during kindergarten.

>

> Eventually he was diagnosed with Asperger's by a developmental ped,

> and with PDD by a psychiatrist.

>

> When he was 4.5 I started him on the Feingold diet and Houston

> enzymes. They were incredibly important -- although he was still a

> mess most of the time, we saw plenty of glimmers of the child he

was

> meant to be, moments of empathy, mornings when he would get dressed

> and ready for school by himself, some sense of humor.

>

> When he was 5 I started chelating him, Andy's protocol, DMSA/ALA or

> ALA only. He responded on the first round, going up to a kid on the

> playground, introducing himself (!!) and going off to play. He'd

never

> done anything *remotely like that before. He began spontaneously

> waving hello and goodbye for the first time. After 5 months of

> chelation, I did the ViraStop trial, which also gave tremendous

> improvement, socially and intellectually. His reading took off, he

> seemed much more comfortable in his skin.

>

> I will say from the beginning of starting this biomed path it has

been

> one giant rollercoaster. I'd see some great new improvement, and

think

> whew, guess this autism thing is over! and then the next day he'd

be

> worse off than before. Sometimes he'd be in bad shape for weeks at

a

> time. But slowly, slowly, over many bottles of enzymes and a

zillion

> supps and now 67 rounds, the good days are finally how he is every

day.

>

> Even though the dx is removed, we're not done yet. He still has

> intolerances to artificials, he still, STILL! gets yeast from not

that

> much sugar. I expect to do 100 rounds, and probably some more

courses

> of antivirals.

>

> But it was a thrill to watch him walk into the shrink's office,

> comfortable with himself, chatty, smiling, wanting to show her a

game

> he'd just gotten. And also -- the shrink now believes in biomed!

She

> kept shaking her head and smiling, and saying, " It's just

> unbelievable! " So I gave her Andy's books and " Evidence of Harm " ,

and

> she just may show up here.

>

> My deepest thanks to Mandi and Dana and Andy and Moria, and

everyone

> else here. n and I really owe his recovery to your work, your

> guidance and wisdom. And occasional kicks in the pants! Thank you

so much.

>

> Nell

>

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Nell, I am so incredibly happy for you and n!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

You are an amazing woman and n is so lucky to have you!!

Congratulations to n, he has earned it!!!!!

lanellici <lanellici@...> wrote:

It's a happy, happy day at my house. I took n in for a

reassessment, because he's been doing so well -- and the shrink

agreed, saying he no longer has any diagnosis. That no one would ever

know he had ever had autism.

Here's the short version of his story (sorry for the repetition

old-timers)...By the time n was 3 he was sick all the time and

mostly miserable. Hit himself in the head a lot, cried a LOT,

aggressive towards his baby sister, couldn't handle any self-care jobs

like dressing himself, often didn't respond when his name was called

or when spoken to, many many sensory difficulties. His language was

advanced, but he would throw tantrums if someone's grammar was

incorrect. He couldn't handle change at all, and once screamed for

days because I rearranged the furniture in his sister's room. At

preschool he didn't speak to anyone for months, and I don't think he

ever initiated conversation in the 2 years he was there, but sat by

himself sometimes watching the others play. At home he had serial

meltdowns, terrible rages, and threatened to kill everyone in the

family. He was suicidal during kindergarten.

Eventually he was diagnosed with Asperger's by a developmental ped,

and with PDD by a psychiatrist.

When he was 4.5 I started him on the Feingold diet and Houston

enzymes. They were incredibly important -- although he was still a

mess most of the time, we saw plenty of glimmers of the child he was

meant to be, moments of empathy, mornings when he would get dressed

and ready for school by himself, some sense of humor.

When he was 5 I started chelating him, Andy's protocol, DMSA/ALA or

ALA only. He responded on the first round, going up to a kid on the

playground, introducing himself (!!) and going off to play. He'd never

done anything *remotely like that before. He began spontaneously

waving hello and goodbye for the first time. After 5 months of

chelation, I did the ViraStop trial, which also gave tremendous

improvement, socially and intellectually. His reading took off, he

seemed much more comfortable in his skin.

I will say from the beginning of starting this biomed path it has been

one giant rollercoaster. I'd see some great new improvement, and think

whew, guess this autism thing is over! and then the next day he'd be

worse off than before. Sometimes he'd be in bad shape for weeks at a

time. But slowly, slowly, over many bottles of enzymes and a zillion

supps and now 67 rounds, the good days are finally how he is every day.

Even though the dx is removed, we're not done yet. He still has

intolerances to artificials, he still, STILL! gets yeast from not that

much sugar. I expect to do 100 rounds, and probably some more courses

of antivirals.

But it was a thrill to watch him walk into the shrink's office,

comfortable with himself, chatty, smiling, wanting to show her a game

he'd just gotten. And also -- the shrink now believes in biomed! She

kept shaking her head and smiling, and saying, " It's just

unbelievable! " So I gave her Andy's books and " Evidence of Harm " , and

she just may show up here.

My deepest thanks to Mandi and Dana and Andy and Moria, and everyone

else here. n and I really owe his recovery to your work, your

guidance and wisdom. And occasional kicks in the pants! Thank you so much.

Nell

=======================================================

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Great Nell;

But please don't leave us!!!

Mark

>

> It's a happy, happy day at my house. I took n in for a

> reassessment, because he's been doing so well -- and the shrink

> agreed, saying he no longer has any diagnosis. That no one would ever

> know he had ever had autism.

>

> Here's the short version of his story (sorry for the repetition

> old-timers)...By the time n was 3 he was sick all the time and

> mostly miserable. Hit himself in the head a lot, cried a LOT,

> aggressive towards his baby sister, couldn't handle any self-care jobs

> like dressing himself, often didn't respond when his name was called

> or when spoken to, many many sensory difficulties. His language was

> advanced, but he would throw tantrums if someone's grammar was

> incorrect. He couldn't handle change at all, and once screamed for

> days because I rearranged the furniture in his sister's room. At

> preschool he didn't speak to anyone for months, and I don't think he

> ever initiated conversation in the 2 years he was there, but sat by

> himself sometimes watching the others play. At home he had serial

> meltdowns, terrible rages, and threatened to kill everyone in the

> family. He was suicidal during kindergarten.

>

> Eventually he was diagnosed with Asperger's by a developmental ped,

> and with PDD by a psychiatrist.

>

> When he was 4.5 I started him on the Feingold diet and Houston

> enzymes. They were incredibly important -- although he was still a

> mess most of the time, we saw plenty of glimmers of the child he was

> meant to be, moments of empathy, mornings when he would get dressed

> and ready for school by himself, some sense of humor.

>

> When he was 5 I started chelating him, Andy's protocol, DMSA/ALA or

> ALA only. He responded on the first round, going up to a kid on the

> playground, introducing himself (!!) and going off to play. He'd never

> done anything *remotely like that before. He began spontaneously

> waving hello and goodbye for the first time. After 5 months of

> chelation, I did the ViraStop trial, which also gave tremendous

> improvement, socially and intellectually. His reading took off, he

> seemed much more comfortable in his skin.

>

> I will say from the beginning of starting this biomed path it has been

> one giant rollercoaster. I'd see some great new improvement, and think

> whew, guess this autism thing is over! and then the next day he'd be

> worse off than before. Sometimes he'd be in bad shape for weeks at a

> time. But slowly, slowly, over many bottles of enzymes and a zillion

> supps and now 67 rounds, the good days are finally how he is every day.

>

> Even though the dx is removed, we're not done yet. He still has

> intolerances to artificials, he still, STILL! gets yeast from not that

> much sugar. I expect to do 100 rounds, and probably some more courses

> of antivirals.

>

> But it was a thrill to watch him walk into the shrink's office,

> comfortable with himself, chatty, smiling, wanting to show her a game

> he'd just gotten. And also -- the shrink now believes in biomed! She

> kept shaking her head and smiling, and saying, " It's just

> unbelievable! " So I gave her Andy's books and " Evidence of Harm " , and

> she just may show up here.

>

> My deepest thanks to Mandi and Dana and Andy and Moria, and everyone

> else here. n and I really owe his recovery to your work, your

> guidance and wisdom. And occasional kicks in the pants! Thank you so

much.

>

> Nell

>

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Nell, I am thrilled for you and n!

This list and the people here (Andy and many others) have saved my

son from autism too! I will be forever grateful.

cheers,

>

> It's a happy, happy day at my house. I took n in for a

> reassessment, because he's been doing so well -- and the shrink

> agreed, saying he no longer has any diagnosis. That no one would

ever

> know he had ever had autism.

>

> Here's the short version of his story (sorry for the repetition

> old-timers)...By the time n was 3 he was sick all the time and

> mostly miserable. Hit himself in the head a lot, cried a LOT,

> aggressive towards his baby sister, couldn't handle any self-care

jobs

> like dressing himself, often didn't respond when his name was called

> or when spoken to, many many sensory difficulties. His language was

> advanced, but he would throw tantrums if someone's grammar was

> incorrect. He couldn't handle change at all, and once screamed for

> days because I rearranged the furniture in his sister's room. At

> preschool he didn't speak to anyone for months, and I don't think he

> ever initiated conversation in the 2 years he was there, but sat by

> himself sometimes watching the others play. At home he had serial

> meltdowns, terrible rages, and threatened to kill everyone in the

> family. He was suicidal during kindergarten.

>

> Eventually he was diagnosed with Asperger's by a developmental ped,

> and with PDD by a psychiatrist.

>

> When he was 4.5 I started him on the Feingold diet and Houston

> enzymes. They were incredibly important -- although he was still a

> mess most of the time, we saw plenty of glimmers of the child he was

> meant to be, moments of empathy, mornings when he would get dressed

> and ready for school by himself, some sense of humor.

>

> When he was 5 I started chelating him, Andy's protocol, DMSA/ALA or

> ALA only. He responded on the first round, going up to a kid on the

> playground, introducing himself (!!) and going off to play. He'd

never

> done anything *remotely like that before. He began spontaneously

> waving hello and goodbye for the first time. After 5 months of

> chelation, I did the ViraStop trial, which also gave tremendous

> improvement, socially and intellectually. His reading took off, he

> seemed much more comfortable in his skin.

>

> I will say from the beginning of starting this biomed path it has

been

> one giant rollercoaster. I'd see some great new improvement, and

think

> whew, guess this autism thing is over! and then the next day he'd be

> worse off than before. Sometimes he'd be in bad shape for weeks at a

> time. But slowly, slowly, over many bottles of enzymes and a zillion

> supps and now 67 rounds, the good days are finally how he is every

day.

>

> Even though the dx is removed, we're not done yet. He still has

> intolerances to artificials, he still, STILL! gets yeast from not

that

> much sugar. I expect to do 100 rounds, and probably some more

courses

> of antivirals.

>

> But it was a thrill to watch him walk into the shrink's office,

> comfortable with himself, chatty, smiling, wanting to show her a

game

> he'd just gotten. And also -- the shrink now believes in biomed! She

> kept shaking her head and smiling, and saying, " It's just

> unbelievable! " So I gave her Andy's books and " Evidence of Harm " ,

and

> she just may show up here.

>

> My deepest thanks to Mandi and Dana and Andy and Moria, and everyone

> else here. n and I really owe his recovery to your work, your

> guidance and wisdom. And occasional kicks in the pants! Thank you

so much.

>

> Nell

>

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Nell

I am so amazed and reassured after reading your story, it really does give

me the kick I needed to realise that I can heal my child. It's so reassuring to

know that you had so many set backs and roller coaster experiences on your

journey, it made me realise that this doesn't mean I'm failing, it's just part

of the process!!!

Thank you so much, please don't leave the list!!! We NEED you!!!

Joy

x

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Nell,

That is so wonderful! We're all hoping to see the 'child that was

meant to be'. And to think that you made a convert in the process!!

>

> It's a happy, happy day at my house. I took n in for a

> reassessment, because he's been doing so well -- and the shrink

> agreed, saying he no longer has any diagnosis. That no one would

ever

> know he had ever had autism.

>

> Here's the short version of his story (sorry for the repetition

> old-timers)...By the time n was 3 he was sick all the time and

> mostly miserable. Hit himself in the head a lot, cried a LOT,

> aggressive towards his baby sister, couldn't handle any self-care

jobs

> like dressing himself, often didn't respond when his name was

called

> or when spoken to, many many sensory difficulties. His language was

> advanced, but he would throw tantrums if someone's grammar was

> incorrect. He couldn't handle change at all, and once screamed for

> days because I rearranged the furniture in his sister's room. At

> preschool he didn't speak to anyone for months, and I don't think

he

> ever initiated conversation in the 2 years he was there, but sat by

> himself sometimes watching the others play. At home he had serial

> meltdowns, terrible rages, and threatened to kill everyone in the

> family. He was suicidal during kindergarten.

>

> Eventually he was diagnosed with Asperger's by a developmental ped,

> and with PDD by a psychiatrist.

>

> When he was 4.5 I started him on the Feingold diet and Houston

> enzymes. They were incredibly important -- although he was still a

> mess most of the time, we saw plenty of glimmers of the child he

was

> meant to be, moments of empathy, mornings when he would get dressed

> and ready for school by himself, some sense of humor.

>

> When he was 5 I started chelating him, Andy's protocol, DMSA/ALA or

> ALA only. He responded on the first round, going up to a kid on the

> playground, introducing himself (!!) and going off to play. He'd

never

> done anything *remotely like that before. He began spontaneously

> waving hello and goodbye for the first time. After 5 months of

> chelation, I did the ViraStop trial, which also gave tremendous

> improvement, socially and intellectually. His reading took off, he

> seemed much more comfortable in his skin.

>

> I will say from the beginning of starting this biomed path it has

been

> one giant rollercoaster. I'd see some great new improvement, and

think

> whew, guess this autism thing is over! and then the next day he'd

be

> worse off than before. Sometimes he'd be in bad shape for weeks at

a

> time. But slowly, slowly, over many bottles of enzymes and a

zillion

> supps and now 67 rounds, the good days are finally how he is every

day.

>

> Even though the dx is removed, we're not done yet. He still has

> intolerances to artificials, he still, STILL! gets yeast from not

that

> much sugar. I expect to do 100 rounds, and probably some more

courses

> of antivirals.

>

> But it was a thrill to watch him walk into the shrink's office,

> comfortable with himself, chatty, smiling, wanting to show her a

game

> he'd just gotten. And also -- the shrink now believes in biomed!

She

> kept shaking her head and smiling, and saying, " It's just

> unbelievable! " So I gave her Andy's books and " Evidence of Harm " ,

and

> she just may show up here.

>

> My deepest thanks to Mandi and Dana and Andy and Moria, and

everyone

> else here. n and I really owe his recovery to your work, your

> guidance and wisdom. And occasional kicks in the pants! Thank you

so much.

>

> Nell

>

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Share on other sites

Dear Nell,

God bless you for writing this. I so desperatley need hope.

My son, now 5 y.o. with autism. We just started on his recovery through

biomed (DAN protocal) 3 months ago.

I needed to hear that a child can recover. So many websites say that autism

is a lifelong disease with no cure. Just about all doctors imply that a child

with autism is one who will have life long problems. My son is my only child.

Like most parents, I want a life for him that is better than mine.

Life has been so painful since his diagnosis. I pray on my hands and knees

that my son gets through this. Last night I prayed that I would have some hope

or push that would help me make it through the day.

You provided that hope today. Congratulations to you & your child.

lanellici <lanellici@...> wrote:

It's a happy, happy day at my house. I took n in for a

reassessment, because he's been doing so well -- and the shrink

agreed, saying he no longer has any diagnosis. That no one would ever

know he had ever had autism.

Here's the short version of his story (sorry for the repetition

old-timers)...By the time n was 3 he was sick all the time and

mostly miserable. Hit himself in the head a lot, cried a LOT,

aggressive towards his baby sister, couldn't handle any self-care jobs

like dressing himself, often didn't respond when his name was called

or when spoken to, many many sensory difficulties. His language was

advanced, but he would throw tantrums if someone's grammar was

incorrect. He couldn't handle change at all, and once screamed for

days because I rearranged the furniture in his sister's room. At

preschool he didn't speak to anyone for months, and I don't think he

ever initiated conversation in the 2 years he was there, but sat by

himself sometimes watching the others play. At home he had serial

meltdowns, terrible rages, and threatened to kill everyone in the

family. He was suicidal during kindergarten.

Eventually he was diagnosed with Asperger's by a developmental ped,

and with PDD by a psychiatrist.

When he was 4.5 I started him on the Feingold diet and Houston

enzymes. They were incredibly important -- although he was still a

mess most of the time, we saw plenty of glimmers of the child he was

meant to be, moments of empathy, mornings when he would get dressed

and ready for school by himself, some sense of humor.

When he was 5 I started chelating him, Andy's protocol, DMSA/ALA or

ALA only. He responded on the first round, going up to a kid on the

playground, introducing himself (!!) and going off to play. He'd never

done anything *remotely like that before. He began spontaneously

waving hello and goodbye for the first time. After 5 months of

chelation, I did the ViraStop trial, which also gave tremendous

improvement, socially and intellectually. His reading took off, he

seemed much more comfortable in his skin.

I will say from the beginning of starting this biomed path it has been

one giant rollercoaster. I'd see some great new improvement, and think

whew, guess this autism thing is over! and then the next day he'd be

worse off than before. Sometimes he'd be in bad shape for weeks at a

time. But slowly, slowly, over many bottles of enzymes and a zillion

supps and now 67 rounds, the good days are finally how he is every day.

Even though the dx is removed, we're not done yet. He still has

intolerances to artificials, he still, STILL! gets yeast from not that

much sugar. I expect to do 100 rounds, and probably some more courses

of antivirals.

But it was a thrill to watch him walk into the shrink's office,

comfortable with himself, chatty, smiling, wanting to show her a game

he'd just gotten. And also -- the shrink now believes in biomed! She

kept shaking her head and smiling, and saying, " It's just

unbelievable! " So I gave her Andy's books and " Evidence of Harm " , and

she just may show up here.

My deepest thanks to Mandi and Dana and Andy and Moria, and everyone

else here. n and I really owe his recovery to your work, your

guidance and wisdom. And occasional kicks in the pants! Thank you so much.

Nell

=======================================================

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Abid,

Go to www.generationrescue.com and read very real stories about how parents have

recovered their kids.

From: Abid Khan

Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 1:28 PM

Subject: Re: [ ] Recovered! (long)

Dear Nell,

God bless you for writing this. I so desperatley need hope.

My son, now 5 y.o. with autism. We just started on his recovery through

biomed (DAN protocal) 3 months ago.

I needed to hear that a child can recover. So many websites say that autism

is a lifelong disease with no cure. Just about all doctors imply that a child

with autism is one who will have life long problems. My son is my only child.

Like most parents, I want a life for him that is better than mine.

Life has been so painful since his diagnosis. I pray on my hands and knees

that my son gets through this. Last night I prayed that I would have some hope

or push that would help me make it through the day.

You provided that hope today. Congratulations to you & your child.

lanellici <lanellici@...> wrote:

It's a happy, happy day at my house. I took n in for a

reassessment, because he's been doing so well -- and the shrink

agreed, saying he no longer has any diagnosis. That no one would ever

know he had ever had autism.

Here's the short version of his story (sorry for the repetition

old-timers)...By the time n was 3 he was sick all the time and

mostly miserable. Hit himself in the head a lot, cried a LOT,

aggressive towards his baby sister, couldn't handle any self-care jobs

like dressing himself, often didn't respond when his name was called

or when spoken to, many many sensory difficulties. His language was

advanced, but he would throw tantrums if someone's grammar was

incorrect. He couldn't handle change at all, and once screamed for

days because I rearranged the furniture in his sister's room. At

preschool he didn't speak to anyone for months, and I don't think he

ever initiated conversation in the 2 years he was there, but sat by

himself sometimes watching the others play. At home he had serial

meltdowns, terrible rages, and threatened to kill everyone in the

family. He was suicidal during kindergarten.

Eventually he was diagnosed with Asperger's by a developmental ped,

and with PDD by a psychiatrist.

When he was 4.5 I started him on the Feingold diet and Houston

enzymes. They were incredibly important -- although he was still a

mess most of the time, we saw plenty of glimmers of the child he was

meant to be, moments of empathy, mornings when he would get dressed

and ready for school by himself, some sense of humor.

When he was 5 I started chelating him, Andy's protocol, DMSA/ALA or

ALA only. He responded on the first round, going up to a kid on the

playground, introducing himself (!!) and going off to play. He'd never

done anything *remotely like that before. He began spontaneously

waving hello and goodbye for the first time. After 5 months of

chelation, I did the ViraStop trial, which also gave tremendous

improvement, socially and intellectually. His reading took off, he

seemed much more comfortable in his skin.

I will say from the beginning of starting this biomed path it has been

one giant rollercoaster. I'd see some great new improvement, and think

whew, guess this autism thing is over! and then the next day he'd be

worse off than before. Sometimes he'd be in bad shape for weeks at a

time. But slowly, slowly, over many bottles of enzymes and a zillion

supps and now 67 rounds, the good days are finally how he is every day.

Even though the dx is removed, we're not done yet. He still has

intolerances to artificials, he still, STILL! gets yeast from not that

much sugar. I expect to do 100 rounds, and probably some more courses

of antivirals.

But it was a thrill to watch him walk into the shrink's office,

comfortable with himself, chatty, smiling, wanting to show her a game

he'd just gotten. And also -- the shrink now believes in biomed! She

kept shaking her head and smiling, and saying, " It's just

unbelievable! " So I gave her Andy's books and " Evidence of Harm " , and

she just may show up here.

My deepest thanks to Mandi and Dana and Andy and Moria, and everyone

else here. n and I really owe his recovery to your work, your

guidance and wisdom. And occasional kicks in the pants! Thank you so much.

Nell

=======================================================

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Dear ????

If you stay on this list long enough, you will hear many many recovery

stories. More of our children are getting better, especially the younger

ones. There is great hope, much more than there was when my son (25) was

diagnosed. Keep learning and working with him!

Barb

Re: [ ] Recovered! (long)

> Dear Nell,

>

> God bless you for writing this. I so desperatley need hope.

>

> My son, now 5 y.o. with autism. We just started on his recovery through

> biomed (DAN protocal) 3 months ago.

>

> I needed to hear that a child can recover. So many websites say that

> autism is a lifelong disease with no cure. Just about all doctors imply

> that a child with autism is one who will have life long problems. My son

> is my only child. Like most parents, I want a life for him that is better

> than mine.

>

> Life has been so painful since his diagnosis. I pray on my hands and

> knees that my son gets through this. Last night I prayed that I would

> have some hope or push that would help me make it through the day.

>

> You provided that hope today. Congratulations to you & your child.

>

>

>

> lanellici <lanellici@...> wrote:

> It's a happy, happy day at my house. I took n in for a

> reassessment, because he's been doing so well -- and the shrink

> agreed, saying he no longer has any diagnosis. That no one would ever

> know he had ever had autism.

>

> Here's the short version of his story (sorry for the repetition

> old-timers)...By the time n was 3 he was sick all the time and

> mostly miserable. Hit himself in the head a lot, cried a LOT,

> aggressive towards his baby sister, couldn't handle any self-care jobs

> like dressing himself, often didn't respond when his name was called

> or when spoken to, many many sensory difficulties. His language was

> advanced, but he would throw tantrums if someone's grammar was

> incorrect. He couldn't handle change at all, and once screamed for

> days because I rearranged the furniture in his sister's room. At

> preschool he didn't speak to anyone for months, and I don't think he

> ever initiated conversation in the 2 years he was there, but sat by

> himself sometimes watching the others play. At home he had serial

> meltdowns, terrible rages, and threatened to kill everyone in the

> family. He was suicidal during kindergarten.

>

> Eventually he was diagnosed with Asperger's by a developmental ped,

> and with PDD by a psychiatrist.

>

> When he was 4.5 I started him on the Feingold diet and Houston

> enzymes. They were incredibly important -- although he was still a

> mess most of the time, we saw plenty of glimmers of the child he was

> meant to be, moments of empathy, mornings when he would get dressed

> and ready for school by himself, some sense of humor.

>

> When he was 5 I started chelating him, Andy's protocol, DMSA/ALA or

> ALA only. He responded on the first round, going up to a kid on the

> playground, introducing himself (!!) and going off to play. He'd never

> done anything *remotely like that before. He began spontaneously

> waving hello and goodbye for the first time. After 5 months of

> chelation, I did the ViraStop trial, which also gave tremendous

> improvement, socially and intellectually. His reading took off, he

> seemed much more comfortable in his skin.

>

> I will say from the beginning of starting this biomed path it has been

> one giant rollercoaster. I'd see some great new improvement, and think

> whew, guess this autism thing is over! and then the next day he'd be

> worse off than before. Sometimes he'd be in bad shape for weeks at a

> time. But slowly, slowly, over many bottles of enzymes and a zillion

> supps and now 67 rounds, the good days are finally how he is every day.

>

> Even though the dx is removed, we're not done yet. He still has

> intolerances to artificials, he still, STILL! gets yeast from not that

> much sugar. I expect to do 100 rounds, and probably some more courses

> of antivirals.

>

> But it was a thrill to watch him walk into the shrink's office,

> comfortable with himself, chatty, smiling, wanting to show her a game

> he'd just gotten. And also -- the shrink now believes in biomed! She

> kept shaking her head and smiling, and saying, " It's just

> unbelievable! " So I gave her Andy's books and " Evidence of Harm " , and

> she just may show up here.

>

> My deepest thanks to Mandi and Dana and Andy and Moria, and everyone

> else here. n and I really owe his recovery to your work, your

> guidance and wisdom. And occasional kicks in the pants! Thank you so much.

>

> Nell

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

> =======================================================

>

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Dear Abid,

please read:

http://home.earthlink.net/~moriam/LOVE_LETTERS.html

also:

Autism-

Mercury/files/KennysProgressReportsFrom

good wishes,

Moria

http://home.earthlink.net/~moriam/

Mercury Detox: Information, Tools, and Resources

> It's a happy, happy day at my house. I took n in for a

> reassessment, because he's been doing so well -- and the shrink

> agreed, saying he no longer has any diagnosis. That no one would

ever

> know he had ever had autism.

>

> Here's the short version of his story (sorry for the repetition

> old-timers)...By the time n was 3 he was sick all the time and

> mostly miserable. Hit himself in the head a lot, cried a LOT,

> aggressive towards his baby sister, couldn't handle any self-care

jobs

> like dressing himself, often didn't respond when his name was

called

> or when spoken to, many many sensory difficulties. His language was

> advanced, but he would throw tantrums if someone's grammar was

> incorrect. He couldn't handle change at all, and once screamed for

> days because I rearranged the furniture in his sister's room. At

> preschool he didn't speak to anyone for months, and I don't think

he

> ever initiated conversation in the 2 years he was there, but sat by

> himself sometimes watching the others play. At home he had serial

> meltdowns, terrible rages, and threatened to kill everyone in the

> family. He was suicidal during kindergarten.

>

> Eventually he was diagnosed with Asperger's by a developmental ped,

> and with PDD by a psychiatrist.

>

> When he was 4.5 I started him on the Feingold diet and Houston

> enzymes. They were incredibly important -- although he was still a

> mess most of the time, we saw plenty of glimmers of the child he

was

> meant to be, moments of empathy, mornings when he would get dressed

> and ready for school by himself, some sense of humor.

>

> When he was 5 I started chelating him, Andy's protocol, DMSA/ALA or

> ALA only. He responded on the first round, going up to a kid on the

> playground, introducing himself (!!) and going off to play. He'd

never

> done anything *remotely like that before. He began spontaneously

> waving hello and goodbye for the first time. After 5 months of

> chelation, I did the ViraStop trial, which also gave tremendous

> improvement, socially and intellectually. His reading took off, he

> seemed much more comfortable in his skin.

>

> I will say from the beginning of starting this biomed path it has

been

> one giant rollercoaster. I'd see some great new improvement, and

think

> whew, guess this autism thing is over! and then the next day he'd

be

> worse off than before. Sometimes he'd be in bad shape for weeks at

a

> time. But slowly, slowly, over many bottles of enzymes and a

zillion

> supps and now 67 rounds, the good days are finally how he is every

day.

>

> Even though the dx is removed, we're not done yet. He still has

> intolerances to artificials, he still, STILL! gets yeast from not

that

> much sugar. I expect to do 100 rounds, and probably some more

courses

> of antivirals.

>

> But it was a thrill to watch him walk into the shrink's office,

> comfortable with himself, chatty, smiling, wanting to show her a

game

> he'd just gotten. And also -- the shrink now believes in biomed!

She

> kept shaking her head and smiling, and saying, " It's just

> unbelievable! " So I gave her Andy's books and " Evidence of Harm " ,

and

> she just may show up here.

>

> My deepest thanks to Mandi and Dana and Andy and Moria, and

everyone

> else here. n and I really owe his recovery to your work, your

> guidance and wisdom. And occasional kicks in the pants! Thank you

so much.

>

> Nell

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

> =======================================================

>

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Share on other sites

Way to go Nell! I am thrilled for you and your family! I also am

very grateful to you for all of the questions you have answered of

mine in the past year...you have been a source of inspiration to

me...and I have enjoyed learning from your experiences. In

fact...we havent done ANY viral protocol yet, and it is definitely in

my future plans. I remember learning about viral issues from you so

long ago.

You need to go out and celebrate..as a family. That is when I know

our son is recovered...when we can act as a family, go places

together and not bring 2 cars..just in case one of us has to leave

with .

Go on vacation, go do something and enjoy the moment! And....I look

forward to reading posts from your doctor here on this list. One

more doctor on " our " side is a good thing.

God bless! Kim

>

> It's a happy, happy day at my house. I took n in for a

> reassessment, because he's been doing so well -- and the shrink

> agreed, saying he no longer has any diagnosis. That no one would

ever

> know he had ever had autism.

>

> Here's the short version of his story (sorry for the repetition

> old-timers)...By the time n was 3 he was sick all the time and

> mostly miserable. Hit himself in the head a lot, cried a LOT,

> aggressive towards his baby sister, couldn't handle any self-care

jobs

> like dressing himself, often didn't respond when his name was called

> or when spoken to, many many sensory difficulties. His language was

> advanced, but he would throw tantrums if someone's grammar was

> incorrect. He couldn't handle change at all, and once screamed for

> days because I rearranged the furniture in his sister's room. At

> preschool he didn't speak to anyone for months, and I don't think he

> ever initiated conversation in the 2 years he was there, but sat by

> himself sometimes watching the others play. At home he had serial

> meltdowns, terrible rages, and threatened to kill everyone in the

> family. He was suicidal during kindergarten.

>

> Eventually he was diagnosed with Asperger's by a developmental ped,

> and with PDD by a psychiatrist.

>

> When he was 4.5 I started him on the Feingold diet and Houston

> enzymes. They were incredibly important -- although he was still a

> mess most of the time, we saw plenty of glimmers of the child he was

> meant to be, moments of empathy, mornings when he would get dressed

> and ready for school by himself, some sense of humor.

>

> When he was 5 I started chelating him, Andy's protocol, DMSA/ALA or

> ALA only. He responded on the first round, going up to a kid on the

> playground, introducing himself (!!) and going off to play. He'd

never

> done anything *remotely like that before. He began spontaneously

> waving hello and goodbye for the first time. After 5 months of

> chelation, I did the ViraStop trial, which also gave tremendous

> improvement, socially and intellectually. His reading took off, he

> seemed much more comfortable in his skin.

>

> I will say from the beginning of starting this biomed path it has

been

> one giant rollercoaster. I'd see some great new improvement, and

think

> whew, guess this autism thing is over! and then the next day he'd be

> worse off than before. Sometimes he'd be in bad shape for weeks at a

> time. But slowly, slowly, over many bottles of enzymes and a zillion

> supps and now 67 rounds, the good days are finally how he is every

day.

>

> Even though the dx is removed, we're not done yet. He still has

> intolerances to artificials, he still, STILL! gets yeast from not

that

> much sugar. I expect to do 100 rounds, and probably some more

courses

> of antivirals.

>

> But it was a thrill to watch him walk into the shrink's office,

> comfortable with himself, chatty, smiling, wanting to show her a

game

> he'd just gotten. And also -- the shrink now believes in biomed! She

> kept shaking her head and smiling, and saying, " It's just

> unbelievable! " So I gave her Andy's books and " Evidence of Harm " ,

and

> she just may show up here.

>

> My deepest thanks to Mandi and Dana and Andy and Moria, and everyone

> else here. n and I really owe his recovery to your work, your

> guidance and wisdom. And occasional kicks in the pants! Thank you

so much.

>

> Nell

>

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Share on other sites

Yeah Nell and n! That is music to my ears. Nell, can I forward

this to my parents who are just now starting to realize I am not

crazy for going down this path? I think it might help bring them

about full force.

Thanks.

Anne

>

> It's a happy, happy day at my house. I took n in for a

> reassessment, because he's been doing so well -- and the shrink

> agreed, saying he no longer has any diagnosis. That no one would

ever

> know he had ever had autism.

>

> Here's the short version of his story (sorry for the repetition

> old-timers)...By the time n was 3 he was sick all the time and

> mostly miserable. Hit himself in the head a lot, cried a LOT,

> aggressive towards his baby sister, couldn't handle any self-care

jobs

> like dressing himself, often didn't respond when his name was called

> or when spoken to, many many sensory difficulties. His language was

> advanced, but he would throw tantrums if someone's grammar was

> incorrect. He couldn't handle change at all, and once screamed for

> days because I rearranged the furniture in his sister's room. At

> preschool he didn't speak to anyone for months, and I don't think he

> ever initiated conversation in the 2 years he was there, but sat by

> himself sometimes watching the others play. At home he had serial

> meltdowns, terrible rages, and threatened to kill everyone in the

> family. He was suicidal during kindergarten.

>

> Eventually he was diagnosed with Asperger's by a developmental ped,

> and with PDD by a psychiatrist.

>

> When he was 4.5 I started him on the Feingold diet and Houston

> enzymes. They were incredibly important -- although he was still a

> mess most of the time, we saw plenty of glimmers of the child he was

> meant to be, moments of empathy, mornings when he would get dressed

> and ready for school by himself, some sense of humor.

>

> When he was 5 I started chelating him, Andy's protocol, DMSA/ALA or

> ALA only. He responded on the first round, going up to a kid on the

> playground, introducing himself (!!) and going off to play. He'd

never

> done anything *remotely like that before. He began spontaneously

> waving hello and goodbye for the first time. After 5 months of

> chelation, I did the ViraStop trial, which also gave tremendous

> improvement, socially and intellectually. His reading took off, he

> seemed much more comfortable in his skin.

>

> I will say from the beginning of starting this biomed path it has

been

> one giant rollercoaster. I'd see some great new improvement, and

think

> whew, guess this autism thing is over! and then the next day he'd be

> worse off than before. Sometimes he'd be in bad shape for weeks at a

> time. But slowly, slowly, over many bottles of enzymes and a zillion

> supps and now 67 rounds, the good days are finally how he is every

day.

>

> Even though the dx is removed, we're not done yet. He still has

> intolerances to artificials, he still, STILL! gets yeast from not

that

> much sugar. I expect to do 100 rounds, and probably some more

courses

> of antivirals.

>

> But it was a thrill to watch him walk into the shrink's office,

> comfortable with himself, chatty, smiling, wanting to show her a

game

> he'd just gotten. And also -- the shrink now believes in biomed! She

> kept shaking her head and smiling, and saying, " It's just

> unbelievable! " So I gave her Andy's books and " Evidence of Harm " ,

and

> she just may show up here.

>

> My deepest thanks to Mandi and Dana and Andy and Moria, and everyone

> else here. n and I really owe his recovery to your work, your

> guidance and wisdom. And occasional kicks in the pants! Thank you

so much.

>

> Nell

>

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Nell, can I forward

> this to my parents who are just now starting to realize I am not

> crazy for going down this path? I think it might help bring them

> about full force.

Yes, certainly. If anyone wants to use my post to help

explain/convince -- please go ahead. My pleasure.

Thanks to everyone for your kind words. I've been teary for two days

now! I took n out of school today (to avoid SVD candy really) and

we celebrated by going bowling and to the movies. I kept thinking

about this list and how it literally saved my family, how doing

something as simple as going bowling used to be a nightmare. I only

did it once, a few years ago -- n cried about the shoes not

feeling right, the flashing lights drove him nuts, the music, the

hubbub -- it was Not Fun, and we didn't last long. Today I was just

out with a regular 7 yo, joking around. Here's hoping all of you get

to the same place.

And I'm not leaving here yet. I've got a ways to go on my own

chelation, I really need to get going on my NT but toxic daughter, and

you guys will be figuring all kinds of stuff out I don't want to miss!

Nell

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> Life has been so painful since his diagnosis.

I know. Even though n's epic rages were terrible for all of us to

live through, in a way they kept the household in such a state of

tension that for a long time the deeper painful part was hard to get

to. I realized after writing my post how many of the hard things I

forgot to say, I think because it was just too painful to keep those

images in the part of my brain I can access quickly. Stuff like the

way he couldn't play. He'd line up toys and that was it. The way his

face was like a mask so much of the time, even how he didn't seem to

care if I lost it and started yelling (yeah, *those images are buried

way down!).

I'm glad my post helped, and I hope you zip over to the sites people

posted where ther are many more stories of success. I had to do some

googling this week looking for an Asperger's/autism symptom checklist

to give to n's teacher, and I was amazed at the zillions of

autism websites out there, packed with links and info, with not a word

about biomed or mercury or even diet. So sad. It's a much happier and

more hopeful world here on A-M, that's for sure.

Nell

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lanellici wrote:

The way his face was like a mask so much of the time, even how he didn't seem to

care if I lost it and started yelling (yeah, *those images are buried

way down!).

<<<<The part about the mask-face was something I had forgotten about. I remember

when my daughter noticed that she would look confused i.e furrow her brow, when

she was verbally expressing confusion. Prior to that her expressions were flat,

except for the tantrums, of course.

I think you are in such a state of panic (speaking for myself) that you can't

absorb or process it all.

I have just now been able to make myself go over the hours of videotape we have

of our girl before her decline. Before her recovery, it would have just been,

personally, too painful to watch her.

Now it is an exercise in curiosity to see when the change occurred. I think it

will take many years for the parents of even a recovered child to recoup, if

that is possible.

I have treated parents of children with cancer, who have survived, and it takes

a long, long time for them to truly believe that life will be okay. I hope I get

there someday, believing that life will be okay, even after recovery.

I have days when I think I can, but I remember the exact moment like it was

yesterday when I realized the ped had given her the shots with the mercury and

the horror in the realization of just what the changes I had seen take place

with her truly meant. I'm hoping I live long enough to forget that moment.

I'm glad my post helped, and I hope you zip over to the sites people

posted where ther are many more stories of success. I had to do some

googling this week looking for an Asperger's/autism symptom checklist

to give to n's teacher, and I was amazed at the zillions of

autism websites out there, packed with links and info, with not a word

about biomed or mercury or even diet. So sad. It's a much happier and

more hopeful world here on A-M, that's for sure.

Nell

=======================================================

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