... I'll never give up.. but... I'm sorry. T.T ...

I've been twenty years away from all I ever knew... to return would make my dream... come true.

I am no longer going to keep this PSA going. It violates steamgifts terms which state:

"When posting links or content, that content should not force users, encourage users through reward, or primarily exist as a traffic source for users to perform an action for promotional, commercial, or monetary benefit. Such actions include but are not limited to clicking a referral link, liking a Facebook page, following a Twitter account, joining a Steam group, completing a survey, or making a donation."

Currently, everything on steamgifts, including entering a giveaway, breaks this rule. Nobody would enter if it did not encourage users through reward. It's not guaranteed, but neither are any other types of things being flagged as "bad" vs "good".

If anybody wants to continue this thread/post, I will be more than happy to allow such a thing.

I will win. But. I can't do this... not right now. Please keep it alive in your hearts and minds - and spread awareness to others!
We are saving lives. This isn't a joke, or something fun. It's real. The horrors of lyme are real.
Never... never... never ever knew... this could happen to me or anybody else for that matter. Please. Be grateful for your own health.

Live your life strong... and do things I cannot do. Please live life for me - where I couldn't be strong enough... you can! You will succeed! Be that person I wanted to be. The person I would have been, had I not gotten sick... as one of the healthiest people around before a damn tick destroyed me... at least up to now. One moment in time. It destroyed it all...

Please never forget your health... and how important it is. We only have one life. Don't waste your chances!

Please send me a message through steam if you wish to keep this going!



A friend of mine, JerichoOfRivia mentioned a while back that I should create a post about this on Steamgifts. I sort of considered, but I didn't know if I wanted to go through with the effort. I've decided to incorporate lots of giveaways into this and try to keep it bumped here and there when I can, and I hope some people will consider doing the same. It's a rather touchy and important issue, and I didn't know really how much I wanted to go into it, or what I would say. Here's what sprung from my mind, so I hope it will get my main point across without being too much about me, but it will be mainly about me, since I am one of many suffering from this disease with no cure.

Some of you already know this, since I mention it in comments here and there, but I have lyme. I was bitten by many many ticks when I was 11 and 12 years old, during the time of some experimentation being done on mycoplasma germs about 30 miles away. I also coincidentally happen to have a very debilitating form of mycoplasma. I told doctors I was sick for many years after my body started to tell me it wasn't well, but they did not believe me. I got progressively worse as time went on, starting with neurological symptoms, progressing to nerve sensations and pain, and then overwhelming fatigue. I was told it was in my head, or that it was all due to depression. Some doctors told me I had growing pains when I was still fairly young, and others blamed it on lack of exercise. Why would they even say that, when the whole reason I was complaining is because I could not do the things I used to do?

I used to run close to five minute miles, but now I'm lucky if I can even make it upright for five minutes on my really bad and fatiguing days. Running and doing other active things outside was sort of my downfall. If I had stayed inside leading an inactive lifestyle, I wouldn't have had nearly as many chances to get bitten by ticks. I started to lose faith and trust in all doctors, since they kept ignoring me when I told them I was sick, and as all the medical professionals I saw gaslighted me into that belief, I eventually believed I was imagining it all, that it really was in my head, so I gave up for a long time. Certain things helped me over the years, and other things seemed to help, but also caused me other problems. I am surprised I lived through this, and that I continue to be as strong as I am. I might just be lucky, since it hasn't yet attacked the places where it can with others, causing death within months to a few years.

I have over twenty various conditions, most chronic and some fully systemic. Some I can slow progression by taking supplements and other things, and most have no permanent cures. Some will take constant medication, and some can be prevented to a degree, or at least masked to some extent. There have been times where I've taken over 60 pills a day. On average I'm probably about half that right now. It's very hard to live like this, and when I was healthy, I never imagined a person could feel this way, even on my worst days, or in my worst nightmares.

When somebody asks me what it is like, I explain that it is like a constant flu most of the time, but instead of being able to sleep through it as a sick person would, and having it go away in a few days, it never ends. On top of that, I have to perform and function in life while I have the flu, unlike the people that get a lot of rest. They get better. I cannot rest twenty-four hours a day, and it's pointless to do that, since my muscles would only atrophy, and it's too painful to sleep for very long periods most of the time anyway. I have a lot more symptoms constantly barraging me aside from a simple flu, but I describe it this way, since most people know what the flu is like. The other stuff is a bit more difficult to get into with somebody healthy.

I have learned a lot about living on the other side of healthy that I would never have known, had I been treated properly. I think this disease and many others it causes are ignored so much because of the fact that nobody believes you are so sick, and most minds cannot comprehend something so devastating without actually having experienced such a thing, so they have a natural form of denial about it. Many people with lyme can do things at times, so on the outside they look fine for short periods of time. Other times when nobody sees them, it may be a different story. Many times the recovery period for doing the seemingly slightest things can be quite harsh. Other times I do a lot more, and it doesn't hurt me later. Most of the time I don't notice the hurt, because I already am hurting worse all over. It's not something somebody can ever see, like a missing arm or leg, for instance. The neurological effects are the same. Mental health is a sad thing to examine in today's world. I have test results of some things showing problems, like seizure disorders, but not very much evidence, since the brain is so complex. Most tech is very new, and hard to get to without large amounts of money. I found a place to work on some of my neurological things, perhaps, but it's over two hours away. My insurance is ignored by most doctors in the area that could help because I am on government assistance since I can't work. It is a form of discrimination that is ignored by my government.

I have only some tests that can show much of anything. Lyme tests are not very accurate. Probably well over half the tests give false negatives. Some people have gotten 10+ tests showing they have zero lyme, and they "suddenly" end up with a positive one. Also, many people do not get the "bullseye rashes", possibly as low as ten to twenty percent. I never got one that I noticed, but after many tick bites, my body started acting crazy, and I had three breakouts of strep in a single month, with full body rashes at 11 or 12 years old. I have gotten 3 or 4 lyme tests so far that are equivocal, and as close as you can be without an actually considered a positive result. I am probably too far into late stage lyme to get a pure positive result, since my antibodies are too busy to show up anymore on a high level, and the lyme learns to outsmart these tests over time, as has been proven in multiple studies and scientific tests, but I am being treated based on symptoms, and my close tests together.

I am one of many that gets toyed with by medicine on an unending quest to find out the truth. Doctors seem like they are useless many times, and will not help. It's really sad when people with that much power choose to not help you, and let you suffer. Some people can get away with almost anything though, and this is especially true of people with power over whether somebody lives or dies. In many cases, if they'd just drop the all-knowing ego a bit, listen to their patient, get into action, dig a little, offer choices, and maybe believe their patients, then a difference could be made for some of these people who are sick. I was not making doctor's appointments to have a fun time, and I don't think it should be put off so lightly.

People are probably sick if they have to call a doctor. Even in the rarest of incidents where they really are hypochondriacs, this is also a sickness that needs to be examined and treated if there really isn't anything wrong. Something in fact is wrong on some core level if they are looking for medicine to help them in some way. It's a cry for help no matter how you look at it. There is no reason to completely ignore human beings who are asking for help. That's what they are supposed to be there for. I guess some forget that along the way, or something. I don't really understand the lack of compassion for others. Some responsibility and accountability would be nice from people in these powerful positions. It's on them and their conscience though. I'm glad it's not me.

I consider myself and my situation a test for others. Will they do the right thing when they have a chance to offer me something, as a sick person? Will they ignore me, when they have a chance to be there for somebody in need? What would the spiritual people of the world do in these situations? Other creatures in the world, and other tribal settings accounted for the sick, and the rest of the group would look out for them and try to make them well.

I don't think the government wants me well here, to be honest. I make them far more money being sick and on the system, as a cash cow for Big Pharma, and whoever else is profiting. It is a win win for them if I struggle, because I have to either pay up, or I die. If I got better, I'd be a direct threat to their jobs, and that's dangerous when it's somebody who has been through hell already. We lose the apprehensions that healthier people tend to have, and we know what it's like to have nothing. Many times those kinds of people take less for granted, and can do a better job, since they don't want to go back to the way it was, being miserable and having next to nothing.

I know this is getting to be a long-winded post, but I want to raise awareness about third stage lyme, and that it can indeed become chronic and wreak havoc on your entire body. I think most if not all of my current conditions probably came from lyme, and I don't want other people to end up like me. There is very little I could think of that would be worse than living a lifetime with the pain, tiredness, torment, and expenses of dealing with problems like this. I cannot work because I am too sick, but I need to get better in order to work again, and so that's where the bulk of expenses comes from. It's a catch 22.

I'm also including all the years I could have had an income, and I did not. In society, they want you to work, but if you're too sick to work, then you must get better, but if you cannot pay for treatment, then you remain sick, unable to work. It is a vicious cycle, and yet another facet of medicine I will not get into. There are even organizations like IDSA, that say chronic lyme does not exist, and people in the medical profession think highly of this organization, and they believe this garbage. It's maddening that so many people are overlooked, and considered hypochondriacs, or mental, depressed, or whatever they want to mis-label so many people that are suffering.

Enough about me. Please remember a couple of things:
Also just a disclaimer of sorts that I am no expert on removing ticks!
The information is what I've come to believe in my own experience based on the sources I read and trust most. There isn't a lot to go on with ticks/lyme.

  • There is a lot of bad information out there about how to remove ticks. One way that most people have access to is a pair of tweezers close to the skin, and a steady pull directly away from your body, without crushing, jerking or twisting, is best . If it's too fast or hard, you can leave the mouth parts embedded under the skin. A distressed tick can also regurgitate a lot of dangerous disease-causing germs into you if you try to use other methods to remove them, like suffocation or burning.

  • If you, a pet, or somebody you know gets tick bites, try to get treated with antibiotics as soon as you can. Push for at least 4 weeks, if possible as well. If your doctor will not get you at least 4 weeks of some doxycycline antibiotic by choice, find another doctor. I guess different areas have rules. I would check the rules for my area, and get the largest amount of treatment I could as early as possible. This can ruin your entire life. Not something to take lightly.

  • It's one of the most underfunded medical problems in my country, yet as many as 300,000 new cases spring up each year.

A quote from lymediseasechallenge.org says, "Although the number of new Lyme cases annually is staggering, there is relatively very meager support for research funding. Indeed, although the annual incidence of Lyme Disease is higher than that of breast cancer, hepatitis, colon cancer, Multiple Sclerosis, HIV/AIDS and West Nile virus in the United States, unfortunately federal funding of Lyme Disease has been extremely disproportionate. For example, Lyme Disease occurs 6 times more often annually than HIV/AIDS, yet it receives less than 1% of the funding from the National Institutes of Health compared to HIV/AIDS. Likewise, there are 141 times as many cases of Lyme Disease than West Nile virus, yet Lyme Disease receives less than half of the funding for research."

There is a lot of good information out there, and a lot of misinformation as well. There are organizations like ILADS, that I think come closer to the truth about lyme disease.

Please consider adding Lyme Disease Association to your charity list if you use HumbleBundle, Amazon (AmazonSmile), or other places you may have an option to donate to for charitable causes, if you don't really have a particular charity you are set on using. About 96% of all money that is donated here goes to causes that help spread more information and education on lyme, as well as other important missions, including finding lyme doctors for people, since a lot of lyme doctors try to stay under the radar in fear of being prosecuted for helping people with lyme. Hopefully it's okay for me to mention that, but if not I'm okay removing the organization.

Unfortunately, according to many states here, and their rules, things like Lyme shouldn't be treated with long-term antibiotics, but having acne is a different story, and long-term treatment of acne with antibiotics is okay. Doctors in many states trying to give antibiotics long-term for lyme have had their licenses revoked, and some have been jailed. It's very bad in some other countries as well, such as Australia. Just an example here, but there's something deeply corruptive at work here in the USA with double standards like the mentioned one above. Lyme can and will kill, while acne is more cosmetic. Anyway, the above mentioned charity is located in the town where my lyme doctor practices too, Jackson, New Jersey.

I found out I had lyme disease after living with my problems for over twenty years. I now have a real diagnosis. I feel liberated.


Please bump for:

  • The generosity of myself and others, and awareness of lyme!

  • Good karma!

  • Your own conscience, health and well-being!

  • To make me happy to add current giveaways!

  • To increase the likelihood of me adding even more giveaways at a more frequent pace!

  • High non-bundle giveaway chances in the future if it can get enough activity! So far not so good on the bump % - still dropping one or two non-bundles every now and then... but the % of joins vs. bumps just ain't up to snuff. Sorry, but it's kinda expensive, so just a small effort would be appreciated if you take the time to join something. Rude otherwise, IMO.

If you're feeling generous and would like to make a giveaway, this format below is awesomely appreciated!

[Superfabs Is the BEST EVER! - Level x+](http://www.steamgifts.com/giveaway/MaR10/MUSHROOMS) | your contributor name

GIVEAWAYS: (I will update this regularly, if I can, but I mainly wanted to express awareness unless something catches on).

*Let me know if you notice something that's already expired, and I'll remove, since I may not notice right away!


Thanks to D3D for this one!

Abalone (ends 1/1)

Thanks to Corran for these!

Beholder - Level 3

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Thanks for all of the support!
LET'S KEEP THE AWARENESS ALIVE!! THAT'S WHAT THIS IS ALL ABOUT! PLEASE COME BACK TO BUMP HERE AND THERE

7 years ago*

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That is terrible. Do I understand correctly that at this advanced stage it's not curable anymore, even with long term antibiotic course?

7 years ago
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It's hard to say 100%, but I think some people do respond well to antibiotics. I don't know just how much, and I think it varies from person to person. I haven't been able to pay for long-term IV antibiotics, but I would be interested to see what kind of results I would have with that sort of thing. I have only tried about a year and a half of one antibiotic, and then adding a second on for close to half a year before my stomach was just too messed up to go any further, so I'm on a break period. Since other developments, I'm waiting before I try any more antibiotics, but I did pulse some more oral minocycline for a couple of months. I felt it gave me some results until I came off, then I felt bad a while. Now, I'm feeling a bit better since another problem has started to become dealt with, but yeah, I suppose in short, I think long term antibiotics can work for some people, especially if they haven't been sick for a really long time.

Lyme and mycoplasma can avoid antibiotics through different forms, and learn over time as well, especially if the antibiotic only hits one form. It is pretty risky with people who cannot get enough of them out of their system fast enough as they die off - the herxheimer reaction. That's why it's been slow for me, since I have several other problems that have not allowed me to get a lot of the neurotoxins or whatever they are called out properly. Then there are persister cells, biofilms, and all sorts of other things that can further decrease the effectiveness of antibiotics. A lot of random factors depending on what the germ is doing in somebody's own system though, I guess. I think it can and does help people quite a bit though, even if it doesn't completely remove all of the lyme. Some people and their bodies can learn to cohabitate with it in a better way over time. That's sort of my understanding on the whole thing, but I don't know for sure. I do know a lot of people do improve after courses of long-term IV antibiotics.

7 years ago
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It was a very interesting read. I was somewhat familiar with lyme disease but I had no idea its effects could be so devastating. I'm glad you got a porper diagnosis too, and to be honest how you got treated suck

By your post I infer you're from the US? I am deeply sorry you have a chronic illness there, where the system is tailored to make the corporations richer.

7 years ago
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Yeah, it's a problem here in the US. I think prisons and healthcare are really making a killing in this country, literally, in both cases as well as figuratively. Not every state has the death penalty, but some do for jails here. There are a lot of industries here that are somehow getting away with whatever they want, and nobody can stop them anymore I guess, or they just don't want to. Insurance, banking, college. Can go on and on, but it is a rather unfortunate thing the way things are right now.

Some of my current doctors are taking my problems very seriously, and they are finding answers as well by not giving up after the first option. Even giving me some sort of testing or options for treatment to begin with has been a good sign. It's a great thing to be a part of, and it has restored my faith in doctors a little bit. I wish there were a lot more that had the kind of attitude some of my more recent doctors have had, but I have considered myself lucky overall since I moved and started getting some healthcare in the state I am in now.

7 years ago
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Unfortunately, there are a lot of doctors who forget about the whole "helping the patient" thing. It's awful that you had so many of those doctors--but you've found doctors who understand what you're going through, and you can make progress on your journey to recovery.

I didn't really know much about Lyme except that it was spread by ticks, tbh. I always thought it wasn't that serious, but clearly I was wrong. :X I'll definitely be more careful about ticks in the future.

And thanks for the giveaways. I wish you luck. <3

7 years ago
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Yes, no doubt, be careful. Thank you for the nice comments also! It is good having some doctors that want to help me find some more answers with things, so I definitely have a much better chance as time goes on dealing with my illnesses.

7 years ago
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Bump!

7 years ago
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Too long for me to read everything right now, but here's a bump for later!

7 years ago
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Thanks for bumping!

7 years ago
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That is some scary stuff. I'm glad you finally found a good doctor who cares. Where in the country were you when you got bit and where were the doctors who failed to properly diagnose you? Most people seem to just think of Lyme as a disease of the heavily wooded Upper Midwest.

7 years ago
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I was in Northern Virginia when I got bit, and my symptoms were just the strange rashes that were positive for strep - maybe my body losing immunity or something? Not sure if that is a connection early on, but I moved to the south, South Carolina. I was searching around in South Carolina for answers a few years after I got bitten, when the neurological stuff started to pop up. I moved to New Jersey and I'm getting help here. I guess it is pretty near Plum Island, and Lyme, Connecticut, so it makes sense they know more about it.

7 years ago
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What in the Christ. Wow.

How, if I can ask, does a child get bitten by many, many ticks?

7 years ago
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It was over time since I would go all over the wildlife refuge by my house. I enjoyed it almost every day. The deer were out of control there at the time, I think, and even now they have a lot of them, and try to keep the population in check in that area. I got bitten, and I would just pull them off of me, not really knowing a lot about that sort of thing at that age. My mom spotted a few on me if I missed them, and got them checked out, but I don't think any tested positive for whatever they did with them. It's a good while back, so I'm not certain, but I did get bitten by several dozen over the year or two that I lived there.

7 years ago
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Oh right. I had some kind of vision of you falling into a tub of ticks or something. Over time makes a lot more sense...

I've heard bits and pieces about Lyme but had no idea it was so underfunded, etc. So thanks for the insight. I'm sorry for you troubles dude.

7 years ago
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Thanks a lot for your nice words. It's definitely a crazy thing for me, how it was so gradual, but I think maybe that was due to the other conditions, like a domino effect, where I'd have a plateau for a few years, and then a drop. Maybe one day they'll figure out more of this lyme stuff though... If I didn't have it, I would be talking about it, I don't think. In that way it is good, and there are silver linings to it, however little they might seem in contrast to the problem as a whole. Working hard on managing my symptoms as best I can, and doing healthy and positive things for myself. Getting well is my priority, so I won't give up on that this time around!

7 years ago
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Ticks (like I guess any pest) can also have boom years I remember one year as a kid we had them really bad, we lived in a wooded area and I was pretty much always outside, in just one day I had over 100 on me after coming inside the house, it was ridiculous.

Luckily I don't remember ever having them nearly so bad after that year.

7 years ago
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Wow! That's definitely a lot! You might have hit a nest or something, if they were the smaller ones. That definitely can happen, but they're so dang small, it's hard to see them when they are in the nymph stages!

7 years ago
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Yea my mom was pretty pissed off since she was the one that had to get them all... She's not the most patient loving woman for sure.

I remember them as not being too tiny, and having them just falling from the trees for a week or so. I also seem to think people were more afraid of Rocky Mountain Spotted fever or something

Having a doctor that actually LISTENS to you is super important, I've quit doctors that I thought were either too arrogant or distracted (or whatever) just because I felt they weren't paying attention or blowing me off.

7 years ago
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Bump for awareness!

7 years ago
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Dang, thats terrible that the doctors didn't believe you when you first needed help. There isn't a lot of awareness but hopefully theres more awareness and research coming. Bump for you.

7 years ago
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Yeah... Maybe some of my problems could have been spotted earlier, and I'd have less damage today with the things that were left to continue harming my body. I suppose it's kind of the "could have, would have" scenerio, and it doesn't do any good to think that way, since it's in the past, but it's hard not to wonder, since I feel a strong sense of neglect over the years by a lot of these doctors... I also hope that lyme disease will be taken seriously down the road, and more help can be available for people that need it, since it's such a hard thing to discover in somebody's system... But I think when you have a whole lot of strange symptoms, it should be at least examined. Then there's the testing, but after 1 test, and a negative, the doctors will often rule that out, even though it may well be causing the symptoms due to their inaccuracies, and other coinfections that are also caused by ticks (like the mycoplasma I mentioned). If there is no Plan B, then at least treat for lyme then, I say, if the patient decides it is worth trying, and understands the risks... Sending people home with a "too bad, so sad" kind of attitude just doesn't cut it...

7 years ago
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Yeah, hopefully research focuses first on developing better tests so that way people can be properly diagnosed. That way they can get help without all that run-around. It'll happen!

7 years ago
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Very touching story. Hope someone will find a cure someday.

7 years ago
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Bump for awareness!

7 years ago
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Thanks for the train

7 years ago
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Wow. Sad to hear, it's pretty disgusting to hear how many doctors ignored the problem or didn't want to do anything about it. I wish you the best for the future.

7 years ago
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Definitely making the best of things that I can! I thank you you for the good wishes too!

7 years ago
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Contribution to awareness.
Abyss Odyssey
Spec Ops: The Line

7 years ago
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Thanks for contributing! I added them up with the discussion!

7 years ago
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Bumping.

7 years ago
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Ticks, I never see one in my country?
I guess it's only on America? NA?

Well good thing, I know once again that.. doctors can't be trusted
Shame on those doctors, probably they just want patient money.. Most of the doctors nowadays won't cure the patient, only giving them treatment
So they can milk the money as much as they want
There are some good doctors, but it'll be really hard to find one
You should try another doctors if you're not satisfied with what that doctor said to you

Hmm.. I guess people ignored this disease because they thought it's just an insect bite, probably gonna itchy for a bit
But thanks! I guess I learn something today xD
I never see those creature in my country though..
Can the virus brought by another insects?

View attached image.
View attached image.
7 years ago
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Well, they are in a lot of areas, but the strains of disease can change from region to region. European bites tend to have differences in certain ways compared to North American. I'm not too sure about anywhere else though as far as how many ticks there are, or how much lyme disease is in those areas.

I am finding some good doctors, but it took a long time to find them. Most of the ones I have seem to take my medical problems into account. The problem is that with specialists, they only focus on their one area they are specialized in, but I have whole body problems, and a lot of different illnesses at the same time. It is tough to treat, since they cannot figure out what is causing what if they try to get to the root of the problems. I think the lyme and mycoplasma are the main things I should focus on, but I only have 1 lyme doctor. Everyone else is treating other parts of the body and just those areas alone. It's a frustrating thing to deal with, since there isn't much communication with most of my doctors to each other.

People are not very sure if it can be transmitted by flies or mosquitoes or anything like that. There is not any real evidence, so it looks like it's very unlikely, and only ticks are transmitting it so far. There might have been possibly one case from a biting fly, but with only one case, it is hard to confirm that's exactly what happened.

7 years ago
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On wikipedia, it say that ticks prefer northern country. US and Europe. They start to expand in Canada, with the global warming, as ticks prefer hot areas.

7 years ago
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Yeah, they definitely are more active in warmer parts of the year also. They are not very active in winter, but I have seen them rarely even at the colder parts of the year too.

7 years ago
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BUMP

7 years ago
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Thanks for sharing. Sorry it has been such an ordeal for you.

7 years ago
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Yeah, I suppose many of us try to make the best of what we have... we all have our trials and things to overcome. I am glad you took some time out to have a look at it. Thank you.

7 years ago
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That was quite a read! I have to admit, while I had heard of the disease, I didn't really know much about it. It was quite eye-opening and sad to hear of everything you've had to go through. Thanks for sharing your story and bringing some awareness to it.

Here's a couple of giveaways to add to your description or train:

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Level 6+ https://www.steamgifts.com/giveaway/XkuJt/asguaard-deluxe-edition-contains-gameguidegoodies

7 years ago
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Thank you very much for adding those! I stuck them with my description, and I appreciate it.

7 years ago
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Tics are evil. I truly despise them.
Lynn is no fun at all.. My Spanish teacher back in high school was out the entire year because of it.
You have my sympathy.

7 years ago
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Wow, I hope things improved, and they made a full recovery!

7 years ago
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That was a heck of a read. Thanks so much for sharing this! You have my sympathy and appreciation, along with admiration that you are able to live with such a condition.

7 years ago
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Oh man, it's crazy stuff, almost surreal. We all have to make the best of the hand we are dealt though I think, or at least we should try at least... As I have said at points in my life when things get rough, "It isn't the size of your problem that makes the difference, it is what you do with it that counts."

Thank you for the nice words. I appreciate it!

7 years ago
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Thanks for the train and thanks for the information. I can empathize with you somewhat. My wife has had Lyme and while her problems are nowhere near as bad as your sound, she still takes lots of supplements and has the occasional bad day. I hope one day you find what you need to feel better.

7 years ago
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Thanks a lot! I wish your wife well with the lyme, and I am glad there are some better days. I'll keep searching for things that help, and I'm working hard to keep myself heading in the right direction. I think things will improve for me as I get more treatment. Took a while for things to get like this, so it will take some time for me to get better.

7 years ago
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Heh. That was very well written. You did not get angry or pull guilt trips. You informed and encouraged others to be aware of the problem. I was impressed with your long dialogue.

7 years ago
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Thank you very much... It's hard not to get angry when talking about something so close to home for me. I guess I have a certain level of acceptance over what it is for me right now, and I think I had to find that or I would've lost my mind a long time back. It's not an easy thing many times, but I won't give up on getting better. I do get a bit upset and frustrated with some of the more corporate aspects of medicine here, but I really need to keep on hoping things can change. I'm doing healthy positive things, and I know they will pay off. Even if I'm not feeling better, at least I'm keeping myself in better health than it would be otherwise to give myself a better chance to beat some of these things. That is my main focus right now.

7 years ago
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Bump and meow. Wow, that was tough to read - so sorry to hear about how long it has taken to get to this point - I can't imagine your frustration and the symptoms sound terrible.

7 years ago
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Yep, it's tough, but I have some better days, so it's not all terrible. I do miss a lot of the old person, and how different even those better times would have been, but I have to do the best I can with what I have. There is plenty for me to still be grateful for.

7 years ago
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Love your attitude. Whitelisted.

7 years ago
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Hey, now I have a new thing to be grateful for! A whitelist! Thanks, I appreciate it very much, Caractacus!

7 years ago
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BUMP for now. Too tired to share my own health woes, but I know the feeling of vindication VERY well!

7 years ago
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This comment was deleted 5 years ago.

7 years ago
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No worries, I'm on the opposite side, should probably get to sleep soon. I'm making coffee though --- typical crazy hours. I think I slept most of the last two days (up from about 15:00 to 22:00 yesterday, but that was all between two big sleeps). Since about noon today, I've been up, but I think all the sleep the last couple of days has started to mess with me. I got all off kilter when I played Valley the first day it came out, then wrote a review about it. AMAZING GAME!

7 years ago
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Thanks for sharing, you have my sympathy, I didn't know anything about Lyme disease other than the name itself. I'm glad you finally got a diagnosis, it must've been so hard going through all that with no empathy from others and not knowing why either. I hope someday, there will be a cure.

7 years ago
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Thanks you very much. I hope things can change too, and that it can be easier for people to get proper care and adequate treatment.

7 years ago
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Closed 5 years ago by Zomby.