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,

Bless your heart. Reading your message brought tears to my eyes

because it makes me think about my own situation. I have cried all

day today, and I think it is solely out of frustration.

I feel exactly like you do, except that I have not even been given

antibiotics at this point. All of the doctors that I see are really

quick to pass me off to another specialist, but they all tell

me, " Whatever you do, don't go see an LLMD - it is a waste of time

and money. This next doctor will be able to take care of you. " Then,

I get emotionally ready to see yet another doctor, list my symptoms

one more time, etc., just to hear them tell me that my Lyme test is

negative, so I don't have Lyme.

My husband is very, very supportive of me. I know that he would do

anything to make me feel better. HOWEVER, he sounds a lot like your

husband - he does not get this at all! He cannot understand how my

feet hurt so bad some mornings that I cannot walk, (They are all

curled up in this crazy position, and they literally feel like they

are locked that way.) but that other mornings I am able to get out of

bed reasonably well. He cannot understand how some days I need a 3 or

4 hour nap by noon, but other days I am okay to at least go out to

dinner with him. It baffles him that my hair is falling out in clumps

at this point - none of the doctors seem too alarmed by it, though.

He cannot understand how one minute I am having trouble thinking, the

next minute I am completely exhausted, and still later in the day I

am in excrutiating pain in different areas of my body. I can

understand how someone would think that I was crazy, I guess. I am at

that point myself.

I drive down the road sometimes and forget where the heck I am going.

I have left the keys in the ignition for two hours taking my youngest

daughter to see the pediatrician. Sure, someone will tell you that

those things are " normal " . Well, they aren't normal when they happen

all day, every day, and you did not used to feel that way.

I have days where one side of my body will feel numb in certain

places. Lately, it has been the right side of my face, particularly

around my mouth and cheek. It feels like I was given a really hefty

shot of novacaine from the dentist. Other times, I get that same

feeling in my shoulder and upper arm, or my leg. This almost always

happens on the right side of my body. My right shoulder all the way

down to my fingers has gone numb while I was sitting here typing you

this note.

I have to wear braces on both ankles most days just to be able to

walk enough to take care of my two little ones. The pain in my heels

is almost unbearable most of the time. I think that were it not for

making myself suck it up and deal with the pain for the sake of my

kids, I might be in a wheelchair or really close to it by now.

I have been told that I had MS (ruled out - clear MRIs and spinal

fluid), Lupus (ruled out with about seven negative FANAs),

fibromyalgia, and that I am just plain depressed (who would NOT be at

this point). I KNOW in my heart that these are all wrong diagnoses,

but I cannot get any doctor to listen to me.

I finally thought I was on the right track with the ID here in town

who told me that he would treat me for Lyme if he thought that is

what I had. He did his 'own' Lyme test here in town. His nurse told

me today that it was negative. I asked where we go from here. She

said that she did not know - she would ask when he comes back in on

Monday. So, another weekend of bizarre symptoms and no one who really

seems to give a d***.

Please, please, please do not give up hope. Inform your husband,

friends, whoever will listen. I carry a notebook of internet research

with me whenever I think I am going to have to defend my position. I

agree with you - it should not have to be this way.

You are in my thoughts and prayers. Have a good weekend.

>

> Okay last week I shared I felt great as of day 15 of my meds (first

course

> of meds after what I think is a June 2006 infection). Some of my

symptoms

> are brain symptoms (which freak me out the worst). I was put on 100

mg Doxy,

> 2x a day, for 21 days (the CDC recommendation). My ELISA was

negative (in

> case anyone is wondering) yet I have a lot of various symptoms of

Lyme, and

> risk factors of living in CT and being very active outdoors

especially since

> March-July 2006.

>

>

>

> Well when I finished the meds, a bunch of symptoms came right back

the next

> day. It started with the joint pain/swelling in hands and ankles.

The next

> day was brain symptoms x2 days.

>

>

>

> My appt with the LLMD is in 3 days and I am trying to be hopeful,

but I am

> still angry. I had hoped that the first course of meds (following

CDC

> guidelines) would knock it out for me (as so many doctors think it

does).

> Just had to vent and share that my last report that things are

going well is

> no longer true.

>

>

>

> I also am angry about the fact that the public (my friends, family,

etc.)

> don't understand Lyme. The mentality they have is like bronchitis

or a strep

> throat infection, they think you start an AB and it begins killing

the

> bacteria and then you get better, better, better, then completely

resolved

> in just one short course, done and over. Well it is not like that

for

> *everyone*. People say to me, 'How do you feel today? " , I

say, " Terrible "

> then they say, " Oh but you are on the meds now so you will be all

better

> soon. " Last night I couldn't resist and said, " But I finished the

full

> course already, it didn't work. " And they say, " So call your Dr.

and get

> more meds " , and I say, " Well that doctor doesn't believe that is

the right

> treatment " to which they said, " Well that makes no sense, wouldn't

the

> doctor want to treat you until you are better, if that med didn't

work then

> take a different one, or for longer. " They just think, as they do

with

> people with sinus infections which don't cure with the first go

round of

> meds, the same Dr. prescribes a new med with no complaint, they

don't get it

> why it is NOT done with Lyme with some doctors. Why can't the

doctors

> understand that it can be that way with Lyme??? Where is the

logic???)

>

>

>

> I swear in 20 years or maybe longer (sadly) they will look back on

Lyme and

> say, " Wow, we botched the treatment for that for so long, it really

was a

> problem for so many and we just didn't get it back then, good thing

we now

> know how to treat it. " Well I don't like having this in a time when

it is

> understood so little! I want to reject it, to say, " I won't be a

victim of

> this terrible thing! " .

>

>

>

> Also the other frustrating thing is that people don't seem to

believe me

> (even my husband) about what I am feeling or experiencing, they

can't

> believe how the symptoms come and go throughout a day (hand pain in

morning,

> pain free in afternoon, that type of thing).

>

>

>

> Not only do I deal with the ignorant ones who don't believe Lyme is

real and

> don't know anything about it, but I get no sympathy from those who

> disbelieve the coming and going of the symptoms.

>

>

>

> The brain fog thing is not understood by others they say, " Oh I do

things

> like forget a name or word all the time " . I keep saying, " But it is

> DIFFERENT and WORSE, I know what that casual type thing is like and

this is

> NOT it. " They look at me, not understanding what I am talking about.

>

>

>

> I am trying so hard not to be afraid and scared about this but the

whole

> darned uncertainty of the treatment and resolution of Lyme is like

a big

> mystery and undeterminable type of thing. I want to think I will

see the

> LLMD and he will wave a wand and it will be gone, but I know that

is not how

> it works.

>

>

>

> Then I get those who think going to a LLMD is a quack thing and

that I am

> some nut looking for a weird cure with some fake product or some

> over-prescribing of medicine.

>

>

>

> And it doesn't help that I swear people think I am making this up

or they

> think " I want to be sick to get attention " . I don't, believe me. I

have

> begun to not talk about it much to others as I fear their negative

comments

> or disbelief and I think that the resulting isolation that brings

is not

> good, but it is coming to that-I feel like I am weaving a cocoon

around

> myself.

>

>

>

> Please, if you go through this type of thing can you share it with

me? Am I

> the only one who experiences this? You can email me privately if

you want at

> christinemm@...

>

> Thanks for listening,

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

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You just told my life story Whitney. The Navy thought I was just trying to get

out of work. Each and every person that reads this is being prayed for. I pray

for peace of mind, peace of heart, and healing. The Lord will help me thru

this.

Blessings,

Rochelle

Whitney Koski <whitkoski@...> wrote:

,

Bless your heart. Reading your message brought tears to my eyes

because it makes me think about my own situation. I have cried all

day today, and I think it is solely out of frustration.

I feel exactly like you do, except that I have not even been given

antibiotics at this point. All of the doctors that I see are really

quick to pass me off to another specialist, but they all tell

me, " Whatever you do, don't go see an LLMD - it is a waste of time

and money. This next doctor will be able to take care of you. " Then,

I get emotionally ready to see yet another doctor, list my symptoms

one more time, etc., just to hear them tell me that my Lyme test is

negative, so I don't have Lyme.

My husband is very, very supportive of me. I know that he would do

anything to make me feel better. HOWEVER, he sounds a lot like your

husband - he does not get this at all! He cannot understand how my

feet hurt so bad some mornings that I cannot walk, (They are all

curled up in this crazy position, and they literally feel like they

are locked that way.) but that other mornings I am able to get out of

bed reasonably well. He cannot understand how some days I need a 3 or

4 hour nap by noon, but other days I am okay to at least go out to

dinner with him. It baffles him that my hair is falling out in clumps

at this point - none of the doctors seem too alarmed by it, though.

He cannot understand how one minute I am having trouble thinking, the

next minute I am completely exhausted, and still later in the day I

am in excrutiating pain in different areas of my body. I can

understand how someone would think that I was crazy, I guess. I am at

that point myself.

I drive down the road sometimes and forget where the heck I am going.

I have left the keys in the ignition for two hours taking my youngest

daughter to see the pediatrician. Sure, someone will tell you that

those things are " normal " . Well, they aren't normal when they happen

all day, every day, and you did not used to feel that way.

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and Whitney;

Both your posts have brought me to tears. I, too, have experienced

the frustration you both write about, but please don't give up! I

have been treated for almost two years now, and finally many of my

symptoms are fading, some are very nearly gone. I also had the

horrible pain in my feet - - so bad that I couldn't stand to have

them flat on the floor, even when sitting. The exhaustion, numb

areas, pain that moves around from one place to another, diarrhea,

bladder incontinence, horrible brain fog, shaking hands, jerking

limbs, muscle spasms, anxiety, shortness of breath, and on and on.

I had it all, and now much of it is nearly gone, or only shows

itself occassionally. I've gone from spending most of my time in

bed, to being able to work on the computer all day. I can now stand

up long enough to cook for myself, and I can make it to the top of

the stairs going to the second floor without having to stop and

catch my breath. I am writing to tell you that I got better, but I

am also writing to tell you about my mother. She ultimately will

die of Lyme disease, and we have to keep fighting to get well so

that we can spare others from experiences like hers. This is

her/our story, and I apologize for the length, but I think it's

important.

As if just experiencing the symptoms I had weren't bad enough,

having to deal with the ignorant, judgemental and fearful reactions

from those around you (oftentimes people you love and thought you

could trust) is in some ways more overwhelming than having to deal

with the disease and its co-infections.

In my case, my 75-year-old mother had come to stay with me from out

of state and was experiencing a huge range of symptoms. In our

quest to discover what was wrong with her, we learned she had Lyme.

Then I learned I had it, too (I had either denied my symptoms or had

attributed them to a number of different things; I had no idea they

were related until my mother's treatment got underway, and I began

to see my problems as more than " middle age " or " in my head. " )

After a year of treatment, my mother's hearing was so improved she

no longer needed hearing aids; her vision so improved she could see

across the room w/out glasses - something she'd been unable to do

even in childhood; her knee pain so improved she could walk without

a cane or walker; her bladder incontinence so improved that she no

longer wet herself at night; her fluid retention and weight problems

resolved to the point where she no longer needed Plus Sized

clothing.

Despite all the improvement she experienced during this year (and I

should explain that she lived with me during this time, leaving my

very-difficult-to-get-along-with father at their home in a

neighboring state), and despite the fact that I kept my father and

brothers informed of every test result, doctor's appointment and

health development she experienced, we were met with nothing but

disbelief, hostility, judgement in the absence of even an attempt to

self-educate, and finally legal action.

When my father obtained my mother's pharmacy records under the guise

of needing them to deal with the insurance company, he decided that

because of one of the meds the LLMD had her on (an anti-seizure med,

designed to reduce the destructive over-activity of the brain that

was causing her feet to curl and cramp, and would have ultimately

resulted in neuronal death), she was being " drugged " and that I

was " abusing her " and keeping her " doped up " in cahoots with the

doctor.

The cognitive symptoms my mother had when she arrived on my doorstep

had waxed and waned during her stay with me. When she first

arrived, she could not recall how she'd come to be here. Her

problems were so marked at times back home, that my brother and

sister-in-law had forbidden her to drive my nephews anywhere. And

yet, they had stood by and done nothing. Not a doctor's

appointment, trip to a psychologist, tests, nothing. I had taken her

to neuropsychologist, who had ruled out dementia. That was when I

started looking for some other explanation, and ultimately what led

me to the doorstep of the LLMD.

Anyway, because of her improvement at times (and because of her

original " clean " neuropsych test), we were hopeful that with

continued treatment, and perhaps some conjunctive therapies, she

might one day find her cognitive impairments a thing of the past.

After all, she had improved to the point where she could now read

books again, and work the crosswords she loved so much. But, we were

not to have that chance.

After a year had passed, my father and brothers were apparently

unable to remember that my mother was already quite impaired when

she got here. They decided that whatever was wrong with my mom was

my fault; mine and the LLMD's. Unbeknowst to me, my brother went to

court and got an emergency guardianship order, which wasn't even

legal in across a state line.

They waited until I was out of town, and swooped in when my mother

was here alone with my husband (who didn't realize the document was

not worth the paper it was printed on). My brother had a friend who

worked as a security guard, and he came along for the ride,

delivering the worthless document in his official-looking uniform.

They quite literally kidnapped my mother; the only reason her meds

went with her was b/c my husband shoved them in a bag and ran after

them. They didn't even take her purse, let alone her clothes or her

dog.

When I called that evening to check on her, my husband was beside

himself. When I called my brother and father, no one would tell me

where she was. They simply told me that I had abused and neglected

her, that she didn't have Lyme disease, and whatever problems she

had were my doing.

After a few days, I discovered that they'd placed her in a nursing

home. I was not permitted to see her or speak to her. I had gotten

a lawyer immediately (two actually, one in each state), who told me

we could fight the guardianship order, but because it was in another

state, and would require what amounted to a battle of " expert

witnesses, " it would cost tens of thousands of dollars that I did

not have. It went before a judge, uncontested; my lawyer was at

least able to make it a part of the order that I be allowed to have

contact with her.

My mother now has the legal status of a non-person. She can make no

decisions for herself. She was left in the nursing home for about

nine months, during which time my phone calls to her

were " monitored " by the staff. This was doubly difficult for me, as

I have my Master's degree in Social Work, and until I became too

sick to work AND take care of my mother, I'd been working for a

hospice and did much of my field work in nursing homes. To be

labeled " a potential danger to the patient " was almost more than I

could bear.

After nine months had passed, my father decided that it cut into

their income too much to have her in long-term care, so she was

returned to his home, even though she begged my brother to get her

an apartment or let her go to assisted living, because she didn't

want to live with his abuse. Ironically, it was my father's abusive

nature that she'd been fleeing when she came here in the first

place; in discovering that she had Lyme, she finally found hope

again; in being kidnapped and having her rights taken away, she now

faces some of her worst nightmares on a daily basis.

She forgets at times about her time here with me, and that she has

(now untreated) Lyme. She is briefly relieved when I remind her

about how much improvement she realized under the care of the LLMD.

She has begged me to never let her forget what happened to her,

although there are times when she expresses a vague feeling that

something is very wrong, that I'm tempted to just reassure her that

everything is fine, hoping that she will finally slip far enough

into the confusion and memory lapses that haunt her to forget about

what was done to her.

Her hearing, vision, joint pain, bladder incontinence, all of it is

back to her pre-treatment levels and then some. She has to use a

walker now all the time. She can't read books or do crosswords

anymore, because her aspects of her cognitive functioning are so

impaired.

My father recently ended up in the hospital needing a quad cardiac

bypass. He had complications and was in the hospital for months.

My brother's wife started going and sleeping at my parents' house at

night, but my mother was alone all day and all evening. (After all,

they had to do something to make it look like my " incompetent "

mother wasn't being left completely to her own devices.)

She really loved being left alone while she was awake though. And

except for a brief period where my brothers blocked her ability to

call me by having the phone company block my number from being

dialed from her phone, she I and were able to talk frequently, as we

had every fews days of my life prior to her kidnapping. (I was so

proud of her: despite her sometimes confused state, she figured out

what my brothers had done by calling the phone company, and then she

confronted them with it; they denied it, but her ability to dial me

was suddenly restored). During that time she also started playing

the piano again, essentially re-teaching herself from the basic

skill level through Book Four, where she stopped, because my father

returned home again. She doesn't call me now, either. And when I

call to talk to her, her voice has a horrible high, thin, anxious

edge that cuts me like a knife. She won't even tell me she loves me

in response to my " I love you, Mom " if he's within earshot; she

doesn't want him to know it's me on the other end of the line.

I offer my long, sad tale by way of illustrating just how insane the

polarization of the Lyme issue has become. I know that

my " dysfunctional " family probably presents an extreme example, but

families and individuals who are relatively " normal " in their

functioning crack under the weight of what we suffer with. How much

more so the family or individual whose functioning is marginal at

best; they can ill afford the additional pressures presented by

ignorant and hostile medical personnel; judgemental friends, family,

and employers; and the overall social pressures that come with being

disenfranchised.

My LLMD, whom I consider to be a very wise woman on top of being an

excellent physician, offered the following anology: she said that

it seemed to her that Lyme disease was experiencing a public

reaction akin to that received by issues like child sexual abuse,

date rape, domestic violence, and even racism in decades past. We

don't want to know about what we don't want to know about. And at

what price our ignorance? A heavy price indeed. . . being paid by

people on both sides of the issue.

I don't know what the answer is. I have struggled with whether or

not to remove the family pictures from my walls. Losing my mother

in this way has torn my very soul. I doubt I will ever see her

again. I'm relatively certain I've been written out of my parents'

will (since my mother no longer has any say about it), and whatever

family heirlooms would've been handed down to me will now find

themselves in the homes of my brothers. What I've lost and will

lose breaks my heart: My piano, my grandmother's doll, my mother's

journals, knowing that I'd be able to sit with her and hold her hand

when it was finally time for her to die. . .my entire family has

been taken from me over Lyme disease. In some ways, it is as though

it was all lost in a terrible natural disaster. I think, at times,

that this would have been easier. At least it would be over, and it

would not have been blamed on me.

I can do little more than pray now, and keep taking my medicine, and

getting better. I would like to write a book about all this. I

would especially like to spare someone else a similar grievous

experience. I want to tell them to get guardianship set up

themselves before someone else does; ignore the lawyers who won't

tell you that other lawyers play dirty, and get away with it (with

the court's blessing) every day of the week in every state in the

union. I can't even manage to stay permanently mad at my family,

because I'm sure they are afflicted, too. Their depression,

anxiety, paranoia and rafts of physical symptoms look all too

familiar to me. . . So, please, Whitney and , and anyone

else who reads this, please, please don't give up. Some of us have

to get well, and stay sane, and keep putting one painful foot in

front of the other so that others might be spared our suffering.

>

> ,

>

> Bless your heart. Reading your message brought tears to my eyes

> because it makes me think about my own situation. I have cried all

> day today, and I think it is solely out of frustration.

>

> I feel exactly like you do, except that I have not even been given

> antibiotics at this point. All of the doctors that I see are

really

> quick to pass me off to another specialist, but they all tell

> me, " Whatever you do, don't go see an LLMD - it is a waste of time

> and money. This next doctor will be able to take care of you. "

Then,

> I get emotionally ready to see yet another doctor, list my

symptoms

> one more time, etc., just to hear them tell me that my Lyme test

is

> negative, so I don't have Lyme.

>

> My husband is very, very supportive of me. I know that he would do

> anything to make me feel better. HOWEVER, he sounds a lot like

your

> husband - he does not get this at all! He cannot understand how my

> feet hurt so bad some mornings that I cannot walk, (They are all

> curled up in this crazy position, and they literally feel like

they

> are locked that way.) but that other mornings I am able to get out

of

> bed reasonably well. He cannot understand how some days I need a 3

or

> 4 hour nap by noon, but other days I am okay to at least go out to

> dinner with him. It baffles him that my hair is falling out in

clumps

> at this point - none of the doctors seem too alarmed by it,

though.

> He cannot understand how one minute I am having trouble thinking,

the

> next minute I am completely exhausted, and still later in the day

I

> am in excrutiating pain in different areas of my body. I can

> understand how someone would think that I was crazy, I guess. I am

at

> that point myself.

>

> I drive down the road sometimes and forget where the heck I am

going.

> I have left the keys in the ignition for two hours taking my

youngest

> daughter to see the pediatrician. Sure, someone will tell you that

> those things are " normal " . Well, they aren't normal when they

happen

> all day, every day, and you did not used to feel that way.

>

> I have days where one side of my body will feel numb in certain

> places. Lately, it has been the right side of my face,

particularly

> around my mouth and cheek. It feels like I was given a really

hefty

> shot of novacaine from the dentist. Other times, I get that same

> feeling in my shoulder and upper arm, or my leg. This almost

always

> happens on the right side of my body. My right shoulder all the

way

> down to my fingers has gone numb while I was sitting here typing

you

> this note.

>

> I have to wear braces on both ankles most days just to be able to

> walk enough to take care of my two little ones. The pain in my

heels

> is almost unbearable most of the time. I think that were it not

for

> making myself suck it up and deal with the pain for the sake of my

> kids, I might be in a wheelchair or really close to it by now.

>

> I have been told that I had MS (ruled out - clear MRIs and spinal

> fluid), Lupus (ruled out with about seven negative FANAs),

> fibromyalgia, and that I am just plain depressed (who would NOT be

at

> this point). I KNOW in my heart that these are all wrong

diagnoses,

> but I cannot get any doctor to listen to me.

>

> I finally thought I was on the right track with the ID here in

town

> who told me that he would treat me for Lyme if he thought that is

> what I had. He did his 'own' Lyme test here in town. His nurse

told

> me today that it was negative. I asked where we go from here. She

> said that she did not know - she would ask when he comes back in

on

> Monday. So, another weekend of bizarre symptoms and no one who

really

> seems to give a d***.

>

> Please, please, please do not give up hope. Inform your husband,

> friends, whoever will listen. I carry a notebook of internet

research

> with me whenever I think I am going to have to defend my position.

I

> agree with you - it should not have to be this way.

>

> You are in my thoughts and prayers. Have a good weekend.

>

>

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This sounds so very like my own life story... I'm sure many of us

feel that way when we read this. I add my prayers to those sent by

Rochelle, and will repeat them daily.

I'm 10 days post-op with a problem that's potentially caused by the

Lyme arthirits I suffered with for nearly 2 years before being

diagnosed. It still makes me angry and I still get scared. I still

feel useless and misunderstood much of the time, though I'm at

better terms with my limitations than I used to be.

Here is a poem I wrote nearly a year ago on a " bad " day when I felt

no one could understand:

The bitter loneliness

My life has become

Makes me feel that

I'm the only one

On this island,

This damnable island!

Flying this life solo

Partitioned by pain

Brain and body wracked

I'll never be the same

On this island,

This damnable island!

They can't see it

Nor do they care

I try to fake it

Hide my despair

On this island,

This damnable island!

The more it hurts

The less I can do

Dark rainy days rule

Sunny one too few

On this island,

This damnable island!

I know I'm not a great poet, but I know most of us share these

feelings.

>

> You just told my life story Whitney. The Navy thought I was just

trying to get out of work. Each and every person that reads this is

being prayed for. I pray for peace of mind, peace of heart, and

healing. The Lord will help me thru this.

> Blessings,

> Rochelle

>

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hi christine you are not alone. as for me have had this disease for about 20

years. was basically ignored and was made out to be a hypochondriac. finally

after being diagnosed by the girl scouts{not kidding} found a doctor with a

brain! week number 12 for me on doxy. went from feeling like an 80 year old man

at 41 to feeling 21 again in a few weeks. lost 50 pounds and could do cartwheels

if i only knew how. you are right about the whole thing being blown as far as im

concerned. it feels to me like being stuck in an episode of the twilight zone

that just wont end. as i look around i can see how many people have this disease

and dont even know it. its very scary if you think about it. you try to tell

people and they ignore you. but theres hope just go see the new doc and take

care of yourself and your family. as it turns out my daughter at 9 years old was

born with this disease, and my wife has it as well but we all have new docs and

are getting better. so good luck at the

doc and feel better soon, kurt

<christinemm@...> wrote: Okay last week I shared I felt

great as of day 15 of my meds (first course

of meds after what I think is a June 2006 infection). Some of my symptoms

are brain symptoms (which freak me out the worst). I was put on 100 mg Doxy,

2x a day, for 21 days (the CDC recommendation). My ELISA was negative (in

case anyone is wondering) yet I have a lot of various symptoms of Lyme, and

risk factors of living in CT and being very active outdoors especially since

March-July 2006.

Well when I finished the meds, a bunch of symptoms came right back the next

day. It started with the joint pain/swelling in hands and ankles. The next

day was brain symptoms x2 days.

My appt with the LLMD is in 3 days and I am trying to be hopeful, but I am

still angry. I had hoped that the first course of meds (following CDC

guidelines) would knock it out for me (as so many doctors think it does).

Just had to vent and share that my last report that things are going well is

no longer true.

I also am angry about the fact that the public (my friends, family, etc.)

don't understand Lyme. The mentality they have is like bronchitis or a strep

throat infection, they think you start an AB and it begins killing the

bacteria and then you get better, better, better, then completely resolved

in just one short course, done and over. Well it is not like that for

*everyone*. People say to me, 'How do you feel today? " , I say, " Terrible "

then they say, " Oh but you are on the meds now so you will be all better

soon. " Last night I couldn't resist and said, " But I finished the full

course already, it didn't work. " And they say, " So call your Dr. and get

more meds " , and I say, " Well that doctor doesn't believe that is the right

treatment " to which they said, " Well that makes no sense, wouldn't the

doctor want to treat you until you are better, if that med didn't work then

take a different one, or for longer. " They just think, as they do with

people with sinus infections which don't cure with the first go round of

meds, the same Dr. prescribes a new med with no complaint, they don't get it

why it is NOT done with Lyme with some doctors. Why can't the doctors

understand that it can be that way with Lyme??? Where is the logic???)

I swear in 20 years or maybe longer (sadly) they will look back on Lyme and

say, " Wow, we botched the treatment for that for so long, it really was a

problem for so many and we just didn't get it back then, good thing we now

know how to treat it. " Well I don't like having this in a time when it is

understood so little! I want to reject it, to say, " I won't be a victim of

this terrible thing! " .

Also the other frustrating thing is that people don't seem to believe me

(even my husband) about what I am feeling or experiencing, they can't

believe how the symptoms come and go throughout a day (hand pain in morning,

pain free in afternoon, that type of thing).

Not only do I deal with the ignorant ones who don't believe Lyme is real and

don't know anything about it, but I get no sympathy from those who

disbelieve the coming and going of the symptoms.

The brain fog thing is not understood by others they say, " Oh I do things

like forget a name or word all the time " . I keep saying, " But it is

DIFFERENT and WORSE, I know what that casual type thing is like and this is

NOT it. " They look at me, not understanding what I am talking about.

I am trying so hard not to be afraid and scared about this but the whole

darned uncertainty of the treatment and resolution of Lyme is like a big

mystery and undeterminable type of thing. I want to think I will see the

LLMD and he will wave a wand and it will be gone, but I know that is not how

it works.

Then I get those who think going to a LLMD is a quack thing and that I am

some nut looking for a weird cure with some fake product or some

over-prescribing of medicine.

And it doesn't help that I swear people think I am making this up or they

think " I want to be sick to get attention " . I don't, believe me. I have

begun to not talk about it much to others as I fear their negative comments

or disbelief and I think that the resulting isolation that brings is not

good, but it is coming to that-I feel like I am weaving a cocoon around

myself.

Please, if you go through this type of thing can you share it with me? Am I

the only one who experiences this? You can email me privately if you want at

christinemm@....

Thanks for listening,

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,

What a great post many of us can understand your feelings and I can

personally add 20 years to it of symptoms, being told by so many doctors

that I am nuts, take a happy pill, all the treatments I tried to get well,

all the money, loss of income on and on because I did not know what was

wrong. I was just diagnosed in February and struggled to find a doctor in

VA. After many months I am finally seeing a doctor in MO for treatment

because I have so many problems and a great amount of pain from FM, VVS and

IC. Since you think this is recent activation of infection with Lyme, you

should have a resolution of you symptoms with an experienced LLMD, but I

agree it will take more than a month of abx.

Take care,

At 10:38 AM 8/11/2006, you wrote:

>Okay last week I shared I felt great as of day 15 of my meds (first course

>of meds after what I think is a June 2006 infection). Some of my symptoms

>are brain symptoms (which freak me out the worst). I was put on 100 mg Doxy,

>2x a day, for 21 days (the CDC recommendation). My ELISA was negative (in

>case anyone is wondering) yet I have a lot of various symptoms of Lyme, and

>risk factors of living in CT and being very active outdoors especially since

>March-July 2006.

>

>Well when I finished the meds, a bunch of symptoms came right back the next

>day. It started with the joint pain/swelling in hands and ankles. The next

>day was brain symptoms x2 days.

>

>My appt with the LLMD is in 3 days and I am trying to be hopeful, but I am

>still angry. I had hoped that the first course of meds (following CDC

>guidelines) would knock it out for me (as so many doctors think it does).

>Just had to vent and share that my last report that things are going well is

>no longer true.

>

>I also am angry about the fact that the public (my friends, family, etc.)

>don't understand Lyme. The mentality they have is like bronchitis or a strep

>throat infection, they think you start an AB and it begins killing the

>bacteria and then you get better, better, better, then completely resolved

>in just one short course, done and over. Well it is not like that for

>*everyone*. People say to me, 'How do you feel today? " , I say, " Terrible "

>then they say, " Oh but you are on the meds now so you will be all better

>soon. " Last night I couldn't resist and said, " But I finished the full

>course already, it didn't work. " And they say, " So call your Dr. and get

>more meds " , and I say, " Well that doctor doesn't believe that is the right

>treatment " to which they said, " Well that makes no sense, wouldn't the

>doctor want to treat you until you are better, if that med didn't work then

>take a different one, or for longer. " They just think, as they do with

>people with sinus infections which don't cure with the first go round of

>meds, the same Dr. prescribes a new med with no complaint, they don't get it

>why it is NOT done with Lyme with some doctors. Why can't the doctors

>understand that it can be that way with Lyme??? Where is the logic???)

>

>I swear in 20 years or maybe longer (sadly) they will look back on Lyme and

>say, " Wow, we botched the treatment for that for so long, it really was a

>problem for so many and we just didn't get it back then, good thing we now

>know how to treat it. " Well I don't like having this in a time when it is

>understood so little! I want to reject it, to say, " I won't be a victim of

>this terrible thing! " .

>

>Also the other frustrating thing is that people don't seem to believe me

>(even my husband) about what I am feeling or experiencing, they can't

>believe how the symptoms come and go throughout a day (hand pain in morning,

>pain free in afternoon, that type of thing).

>

>Not only do I deal with the ignorant ones who don't believe Lyme is real and

>don't know anything about it, but I get no sympathy from those who

>disbelieve the coming and going of the symptoms.

>

>The brain fog thing is not understood by others they say, " Oh I do things

>like forget a name or word all the time " . I keep saying, " But it is

>DIFFERENT and WORSE, I know what that casual type thing is like and this is

>NOT it. " They look at me, not understanding what I am talking about.

>

>I am trying so hard not to be afraid and scared about this but the whole

>darned uncertainty of the treatment and resolution of Lyme is like a big

>mystery and undeterminable type of thing. I want to think I will see the

>LLMD and he will wave a wand and it will be gone, but I know that is not how

>it works.

>

>Then I get those who think going to a LLMD is a quack thing and that I am

>some nut looking for a weird cure with some fake product or some

>over-prescribing of medicine.

>

>And it doesn't help that I swear people think I am making this up or they

>think " I want to be sick to get attention " . I don't, believe me. I have

>begun to not talk about it much to others as I fear their negative comments

>or disbelief and I think that the resulting isolation that brings is not

>good, but it is coming to that-I feel like I am weaving a cocoon around

>myself.

>

>Please, if you go through this type of thing can you share it with me? Am I

>the only one who experiences this? You can email me privately if you want at

><mailto:christinemm%40snet.net>christinemm@....

>

>Thanks for listening,

>

>

>

>

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Oh, , my heart goes out to you. It's difficult enough to

grasp what Lyme is doing to you much less explain it to others.

The general public knows very little about Lyme. I got used to people

saying, " But you look so good! " when I told them I had Lyme. I'd then

explain about Lyme flush, which usually made them feel bad. I don't

want to make others feel bad so I eventually gave up.

And, like you, I've stopped offering information. I'm quite

forthcoming when people ask me about Lyme because they've expressed an

interest, so information is getting disseminated to people who are

receptive to it.

My husband has MS. When he was first diagnosed his family wanted to

know why he didn't " go to Boston and get cured " because they knew of

someone who had MS who did that. It did us know good to tell them that

MS can't be cured. They were not ready to hear the truth about MS. He

asserted that it was his disease and he was going to handle it his

way. Eventually they gave up, opened their minds, and now his sister

rides in the MS Bike-a-thon each year.

As for LLMDs and why other doctors don't offer longer treatment, I

tell people that the course of treatment for Lyme is very

controversial. People usually like a good juicy controversy, so I

offer up both sides of the controversy, including the threat to the

medical licenses of LLMDs.

I'm so glad you found this group because all of us here understand

what you're going through. Vent away! And tell us what your LLMD says!

Jessie

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Whitney,

I'm no doctor, but some of your symptoms sound like you have an

underactive thyroid (your hair falling out, exhaustion). You need to

see a wholistic doctor who will take into account all of your

symptoms. If you can't get to see an LLMD, at least find an osteopath

(DO -- like an MD, but trained to treat the whole person) who is

willing to work with you. A good general practitioner will be open to

learning about Lyme to help you get better; that means taking reading

material to him/her and I'd start with Burrascano's protocol (you can

get it at ilads.org).

Lyme disrupts every system of the body. I have depression, a sleep

disorder, and hypothyroidism. Are they all caused by Lyme? I don't

know, but it doesn't really matter because I'm treating them and

intend to keep treating them.

Jessie

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Missweather, your story is heartbreaking. I hope that putting it

into writing has helped you some, although there is nothing that can

permanently ease the pain you've suffered.

I'll bet there's not one of us who has wondered why we continue to

fight this nasty disease -- Missweather's mother is why.

Jessie

>

>

>

> I can do little more than pray now, and keep taking my medicine, and

> getting better. I would like to write a book about all this. I

> would especially like to spare someone else a similar grievous

> experience. I want to tell them to get guardianship set up

> themselves before someone else does; ignore the lawyers who won't

> tell you that other lawyers play dirty, and get away with it (with

> the court's blessing) every day of the week in every state in the

> union. I can't even manage to stay permanently mad at my family,

> because I'm sure they are afflicted, too. Their depression,

> anxiety, paranoia and rafts of physical symptoms look all too

> familiar to me. . . So, please, Whitney and , and anyone

> else who reads this, please, please don't give up. Some of us have

> to get well, and stay sane, and keep putting one painful foot in

> front of the other so that others might be spared our suffering.

>

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, thank you for sharing your poem with us. The imagery of being

alone on a damnable island speaks to me and I intend to use it in a

visualization (me swimming away and leaving all the spirochetes behind!).

Jessie

>

>

>

> Here is a poem I wrote nearly a year ago on a " bad " day when I felt

> no one could understand:

>

> The bitter loneliness

> My life has become

> Makes me feel that

> I'm the only one

> On this island,

> This damnable island!

>

> Flying this life solo

> Partitioned by pain

> Brain and body wracked

> I'll never be the same

> On this island,

> This damnable island!

>

> They can't see it

> Nor do they care

> I try to fake it

> Hide my despair

> On this island,

> This damnable island!

>

> The more it hurts

> The less I can do

> Dark rainy days rule

> Sunny one too few

> On this island,

> This damnable island!

>

> I know I'm not a great poet, but I know most of us share these

> feelings.

>

>

>

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Jessie,

Thanks for your note. I have " supposedly " been tested for an

underactive thyroid because that was the doctor's first suspicion

when some of this started so long ago. Everytime they take blood for

that, they tell me that it is " normal " .

I am at my wit's end. I am having one of those days where I am so

angry and frustrated and tired of this that I just want to scream at

the top of my lungs. I am losing hope, and I am losing it rapidly. If

no one is going to believe me and no one is going to help me, then

why do I keep wasting my time waiting for someone to miraculously

appear that can fix my problems?

I just told my husband a few minutes ago that I feel like I have to

put on this show where I do my best to act like there is nothing

wrong with me. I am having one of those days where my heels hurt so

bad that I do not think I can take another step. So, my husband's

solution is to sit down. What he doesn't seem to understand is that

they hurt even when I have my feet resting on the floor, even when I

am laying in bed. What I want more than anything right now is a nap,

but I am scared to even lay down for fear that the pain will be so

bad that I will not be able to sleep.

My face is still numb on the right side. Yesterday, I tried to read

to my three-year-old, and I kept messing up the words. It was like my

brain saw the word on the page, knew what it was, but a different set

of words were coming out of my mouth. I think that I am going insane.

I get to a point (where I am at today) where I start to believe all

the doctors. I start to believe that it is all in my head.

I have tried to take an entire notebook of Lyme information to these

doctors, including Burrascano's Guidelines (of which I have almost

3/4 of the symptoms, I think). They all see it; they all say that I

might be right, but that they are not the ones to make that call. So,

what am I supposed to do at this point? My husband is completely

against seeing an LLMD becuase they do not take insurance and these

doctors have told him that they are almost always in it for the

money. I am scared and lonely and tired. I have a three year old and

a seven month old to take care of. I am no decent mother these days.

I am not a good wife these days. I feel worthless. I often wonder if

they are ever going to figure out what it is that is wrong with me. I

am 26 years old and I feel like I am 75.

I am done ranting now. Sorry for going on for so long. It just feels

good to finally have people around me who can totally relate to what

I am talking about. At least you all do not think that I am nuts.

Whitney

>

> Whitney,

>

> I'm no doctor, but some of your symptoms sound like you have an

> underactive thyroid (your hair falling out, exhaustion). You need to

> see a wholistic doctor who will take into account all of your

> symptoms. If you can't get to see an LLMD, at least find an

osteopath

> (DO -- like an MD, but trained to treat the whole person) who is

> willing to work with you. A good general practitioner will be open

to

> learning about Lyme to help you get better; that means taking

reading

> material to him/her and I'd start with Burrascano's protocol (you

can

> get it at ilads.org).

>

> Lyme disrupts every system of the body. I have depression, a sleep

> disorder, and hypothyroidism. Are they all caused by Lyme? I don't

> know, but it doesn't really matter because I'm treating them and

> intend to keep treating them.

>

> Jessie

>

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Jessie MacMillan wrote:

> but some of your symptoms sound like you have an

> underactive thyroid (your hair falling out, exhaustion).

Aha! My has started doing that again after stopping for awhile. I've been

on a slightly lower dose of thyroid hormone for about a month. Good thing I

began going back to a higher dose already.

Deanna

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Whitney,

Your husband may be completely against seeing an LLMD, but you need to

see one. You also need to get copies of all your test results. There's

some controversy over what " normal " is for thyroid tests -- and your

normal may be lower or higher than what a lab considers normal.

If you don't go to an LLMD, you can consider trying Buhner's protocol.

Buhner wrote a book called " Healing Lyme " that explains how to

treat Lyme with herbs and supplements. It's better if you try the

protocol with the knowledge of a doctor, but if you can't get

treatment you could try it on your own.

I still think going to an LLMD is your best bet. Go for an evaluation

if nothing else. And be sure to take copies of all your test results.

Jessie

>

>

> I have tried to take an entire notebook of Lyme information to these

> doctors, including Burrascano's Guidelines (of which I have almost

> 3/4 of the symptoms, I think). They all see it; they all say that I

> might be right, but that they are not the ones to make that call. So,

> what am I supposed to do at this point? My husband is completely

> against seeing an LLMD becuase they do not take insurance and these

> doctors have told him that they are almost always in it for the

> money. I am scared and lonely and tired. I have a three year old and

> a seven month old to take care of. I am no decent mother these days.

> I am not a good wife these days. I feel worthless. I often wonder if

> they are ever going to figure out what it is that is wrong with me. I

> am 26 years old and I feel like I am 75.

>

>

> I am done ranting now. Sorry for going on for so long. It just feels

> good to finally have people around me who can totally relate to what

> I am talking about. At least you all do not think that I am nuts.

>

> Whitney

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