Dear Kristen and Scott,
Go to a site www.mgwater.com
You will find your symptoms there.
Mary

-------------- Original message from "Kirsteen Wright" 
<kirsteen.falcons...@gmail.com>: -------------- 




On Sat, Feb 23, 2008 at 4:03 PM, Scott <scottie592...@yahoo.com> wrote:

Hi, Kirsteen. My name is Scott and I have been diagnosed with a myalgic 
condition that none of my doctors can figure out. This condition M.E. sounds a 
lot  like what I have 

Hi Scott

You could try http://www.mechat.co.uk/  there's a lot of links there. 
Unfortunately, over here, the psychiatric brigade hijacked the funding for 
research and of course won't let go so there's very little biomedical research 
done on it. 

We're still frequently told it's all in our heads and all we need is some CBT 
to persuade us we're not ill and we'll be fine. Despite that we're not allowed 
to donate organs or blood and the changes in the brain stem are showing up on 
autopsies and it can now officially be given as a cause of death. If you can 
afford the private tests you can also show the degeneration in the 
mitochondria, and the ATp / Awhatsits imbalance.

As there is so little real research, there are many theories about what causes 
it but no real proof, therefore no real treatment. Lumping M.E. in with cronic 
fatigue also blurs the edges since fatigue can occur in so many totally 
unrelated conditions from depression to post viral illness etc.

When I was struck down by it (and I really was felled) I was healthy, exercised 
regularly, was in a challenging job I loved, ate a wholefood, mainly organic 
diet, carefully supplemented, practised the Silva method of postive thinking 
had just moved into a beautiful new flat and generally adored life.

Within a couple of weeks I was virtuall housebound, frequently bedbound with 
horrendous vertigo and a whole catalogue of digestive, cognative and motor 
complaints. That was 18 months ago, in many ways I'm worse now and haven't 
worked since. I'm extremely limited in my abilities and any attempt to push the 
boundaries leads to such loss of muscle control that I can't even stay upright 
but have to be picked off the floor and carried to bed. 

On a really good day I might make it out but I'll pay for it by being bedbound 
for 2 or 3 days after it. But, hey, I'm by no means the worst affected, there 
are a lot of people an awful lot worse off with it than me. And there has been 
some improvement on the cognative side. At first I couldn't read more than a 
paragraph or watch more tan 10 minutes of tv. Now, although I'm nowhere near 
the level of academic research I used to do for fun, on a good day, I can 
manage things like emails and sometimes watch a whole program. Just don't ask 
me to remember it afterwards :-)

Hope you find someting useful

Kirsteen