Thursday, April 21, 2011

Nominated for The Versatile Blogger Award! :)

Versatile Blogger!



Many thanks to Mandie at http://blog.tolovearose.com/ for nominating me for the Versatile Blogger Award!  That definitely made me smile today!

These are the rules:
1. Winners grab the image above and put it in your blog.
2.Link back to the person who gave you it.
3.Tell 10 things about yourself
4.Award 15 recently discovered bloggers.
5.Contact the bloggers you have awarded to let them know they have won.

Here are 10 things about me, read at your own risk =


1.   I'm from South America - Lima, Peru to be exact


2.  I overlook things right in front of my face sometimes (Kevin, where did you put the.....) lol


3.  I LOVE to sing and be onstage so I'm a karaoke diva


4.  I'm a Peruvian that can't handle spicy food, go figure


5.  Half of my family are indiginous Peruvians but I look like a total white girl, what's up with that!?!?  Must be the Italian/Spanish blood in me


6.  I have 2 dogs, Bella and Charlie.  They're SO spoiled! ;-)


7.  I work from home as a Spanish Interpreter for a company from California


8.  I used to want to be a writer or a psychologist, neither of which ever happened


9.  My house got broken into last year, with me IN it.  They took my TV, wrecked my living room and broke my front door, piercing a hole through the sheetrock.  $3,000 of damage in 60 seconds, now that's talent!!!


10.  I'm marginally addicted to Facebook.  I LOVE that I've been able to reconnect with people I counted as lost through the years

MY NOMINEES IN NO PARTICULAR ORDER (I don't know 15 yet! lol)

Mandie - To Love a Rose
Stefanie -Shortstackstef
Adriana -  Adriana Bee

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Every Story Has a Beginning...This Is Mine

I guess I look healthy enough.  I guess that's why the people at the law firm I worked at couldn't understand why I HAD to quit for health reasons back in '07.  That is both a blessing and a curse because most people refuse to believe that which they can't see.  I sometimes have a hard time believing it myself, I can feel perfectly normal 1 minute and awful the next.  Luckily things have improved immensely for me since I decided to take control of my own health instead of being at the mercy of my neurologist, and since I took a part time job to try to bring the stress level down.  I write this in the hopes that others will find freedom from the so-called "medicines" that are so unsuccessful at treating most of us MSers.  I also write this in the hopes that my friends and family will come to understand what life in my shoes is like a little better.

I was born in Lima, Peru (that's in South America for those that don't know) and moved to the U.S. when I was 11, so I'm Hispanic.  This is not a disease that people of my ethnicity are affected with often, however, I was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis when I was 21, in '99.  I had just moved to Atlanta, GA from Fairfield, IA and I counted myself blessed because I had moved to a city that had one of the most renown centers for neurological disorders around, The Shepherd Center.  I was young, scared and uninformed.  For many years I chose to live in the dark because seeing the light would mean I would have to face what MIGHT be a grim future.  That was one of the biggest mistakes of my life, but hindsight's 20/20 right?  Had I chosen to face reality sooner I would have seen that regular western medicine did NOT hold the answer for me and was not going to help me fight this disease.  Instead I allowed years to pass and certain irreversible effects to happen to my body before I wised up.  I finally came to the realization that I needed to make a change after seeing a friend that also has MS and was living a normal life thanks to getting off any FDA approved MS medications.  I was living in pain because of the treatments thinking there was no other way and in fear for what my future would hold. The prospect of getting out from under my neurologist thumb was terrifying to me, but more terrifying than that were the prospects that my doctor was suggesting as "other treatment options".  He first suggested Tysabri which is one of the newer medications and has many awful side effects, one of which is a track record of killing several people...no thanks, next!!  Then he suggested an experimental treatment where, get this, they would give me super heavy doses of chemotherapy in order to completely wipe my immune system out, and then rebuild it back up hopefully MS free.  This is of course given that I don't get even a mild cold or even a tiny infection (Like a hangnail) which would surely kill me without an immune system and which has killed several people that made the mistake of trying this "treatment" and blindly trusting their Neurologists.  As attractive as it sounded to be a self-imposed AIDS patient, I had to turn both of these options down, but being that none of the treatments I tried worked I had to think of other options.  So began my skeptical journey into natural alternatives, I got off any injections that were poisoning my body instead of helping it and began taking charge of my own health.  It was one of the scariest and best decisions I've ever made.  To say that I have lost my faith in doctors is a gross understatement.  I've seen them be only interested in working with the pharmaceutical companies to fatten their own pockets, at the expense of so many MS sufferers having a much worse quality of life BECAUSE of these "medicines".  I felt sick as a dog for 11 years so forgive me if I call them what they truly are....poisons!

My reason for writing this is to share my own situation, issues that I've been dealing with and research gathered through the years.  My hope is that everyone that reads this, will be free of the poisons our neurologists love to call "MS treatments" and find out that there are better, less painful ways to treat this disease.  And that no matter what you think or what your neurologist told you that there IS hope for a better life.

Stay tuned for information on the MS drugs I've unsuccessfully tried and the natural options that have changed my life.