I just wanted to comment that blogging is a great way to "spread the word" about TM. I just started a blog last July, and some of my first posts were about TM. My blogging host. WordPress, allows for what they call "pages," which are different from regular posts, and the links to them stay up in the top right hand corner. I put my TM posts there so they'd be always visible for anyone who looks at my blog. Mine is in 4 parts, too. :) On my "dashboard" of my blog, I can see what search terms were used to lead people to my blog, and very, very often there is something about TM or some TM symptom in the search terms. I don't see where the searches are coming from -- my heart goes out to those searchers, and I hope what they read on my blog is a help to them. I've been amazed about what a humongous blogging community is out there. BTW, WordPress and Blogger are free blog hosts, if anyone else is considering starting one. WordPress has a paid upgrade, and Typepad is another paid service -- there are a few more bells and whistles with the paid ones, but the free ones work just fine -- especially for me as a beginner. :) Barbara H. _http://barbarah.wordpress.com/_ (http://barbarah.wordpress.com/) In a message dated 4/5/2007 10:55:53 AM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Jude - or anyone that's interested - Just FYI: I've published an account in 4 parts, about my dealing with both MVP and TM at the same time, on my blog, 'TK's Korner'. You can find it if you're interested - either for the book, or just to read - at <tkkorner.blogspot.com/> It's not so much a detailed history of everything that's happened since I got TM, as it is an explanation of how both conditons affect the nervous system and what I've had to deal with. Sally ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
