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Saturday, January 3, 2015

Interruption

It is infinitely more difficult to explain the complexities of living with ALS than to experience the disease, primarily because no two sufferers can be said to anguish over the same symptoms. As no two fingerprints are alike, so follows the dilemma of treatment for the anomalies inherent in Gehrig's beast. Until a common thread, if it exists, can be found that binds together a singular proclamation of a universal cure, the investigative medical community will continue to wallow in a swamp of miserable failure. Unless scientists in the laboratories dedicated to research through a pharmaceutical paradigm expand to the study and consideration of anecdotal evidence, the prognosis for their success will be identical to that of the original diagnosis and prognosis I received on March 15, 2011, sans the consequences.

Simply put, (I know, too late), the medical community is barking up a tree as it is blinded of the forest. The information is OUT THERE, not UP THERE! Idiots. I don't have time for this shit.

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