WELL PUT, Lori!!! --- On Fri, 4/17/09, Lori Biehler <lbieh...@earthlink.net> wrote:
PT needs to be done for each person, at their ability level. If you can only move a toe, move that toe. If you can’t move anything, than I don’t know what they do for you. No one should ever tell anyone what PT to do or not to do. If you feel better after moving some, and your doctor says it is OK for you, than do it. I myself do exercise at a gym and started out in PT over 9 years ago. It has helped me so much and not only helps my mobility, it helps keep my bones strong, etc. I saw Dr. Kerr starting when he opened his practice and he advocates exercise and always has told me if you can do it, go for it. Exercise hurts healthy people, building muscle hurts, that is just how it is. You get tired, but so do healthy people. I like to sleep, so if I sleep a bit longer and more soundly on gym day, more power to me. Others I know that exercise feel the same way and would never stop, it helps us a ton. If you feel better using your legs for a few hours, use them, maybe in time you will feel better using them for a bit longer, or it will easier for you to use them during your 2 hours. Either way, anything that helps you feel better and is good for you is great to keep up! Lori From: Trudy Ogilvie [mailto:mother...@gmail.com] Sent: Thursday, April 16, 2009 11:12 PM To: fr...@franksheldon.com Cc: Pieter and Heather; tmic-list@eskimo.com Subject: Re: [TMIC] Balance So does this mean you think that PT is meaningless? Why do my legs feel better after a work out than when I get up from my chair after 2 hours of answering e-mail, paying the bills, throwing out all the junk mail and making doctor appointments. Do you honestly feel that it's a waste of time??? Seriously my friend, I am interested in your opinion in whether PT is worth the effort. I thought you once said that exercise was very important for us?? I could be wrong, it's happened maybe once before :) Trudy P.S. You never did announce the winner of what to do about your falling down and really injuring yourself.... but I'll forgive you.... I guess it was much more serious than you thought originally. I am so sorry you wound up in the hospital..... I hope you are doing better. On Tue, Apr 14, 2009 at 4:12 PM, fr...@franksheldon.com <fr...@franksheldon.com> wrote: Lack of Proprioception Proprioception is the ability to know where each and every part of your body is spatially. Before TM I typed 70 words per minute with few mistakes. I took the typing course in junior high school, then decided to be an English Major in College, and just got better and better. I took a 23 year breather while practicing medicine, then got back into writing (Typing) only to be struck down with TM 15 months later, Aug 2000. Within several months my typing was down to 5, five, words per minutes with constant mistakes. My fingers had lost the ability to fly out and down to hit the right key. I had, have, to look at my fingers, so don't see my mistakes on the screen. Practice does not make my finger do any better. I hope that helps F