Thanks  Bernie,
 
That really  cleared things up for me.  My brother lost a leg to cancer 
radiation  treatment and he had a terrible time treating the "phantom"  pain.
 
I wonder why  there would be such pain at the site of the incision if we 
cannot feel  anything?  We don't feel pain on the outside of the epidermis, but 
inside  the body is another story.  It is a seemingly unnatural thing to happen 
to  the body.  I mean, they can poke us with needles all day and we never feel 
 a thing, but if we were poked hard enough to cause an injury, we would 
somehow  internalize the pain and have some kind of reaction, somewhere inside 
our  
bodies.
 
I don't know  if I am getting my point across...but the whole thing about 
paralysis is pretty  amazing.  I believe that we have, somewhere inside our 
brains and bodies,  the ability to overcome things like TM.  We ought to be 
growing 
new lines  of communication between the brain and our bodies. 
 
Day after day,  I try to raise my legs or bend my knees, or turn from side to 
side but to no  avail.  Sometimes I wonder why surgeons cannot take viable 
nerves that are  working and bypass the ones that don't.  They are able to do 
it 
with  arteries right in our hearts...that's pretty bold.  Why not try it with 
the  spinal cord too...they can't hurt us any more than we are already.  
Well,  yes they could, but I think I would take my chances.
 
Does anyone  know anything about the nerve damage that occurs with TM?  Are 
the nerves  damaged only at the site on the spinal cord, or are they damaged 
all the way  down the area that we are paralyzed?
 
Hey, don't  blame me...it's 3:00 in the morning here in lovely springtime 
Michigan.  We  have so many things in bloom now that it's just beautiful.
 
Love You  All,
Jude
"Our present troubles are quite small and won't last very long. Yet  they 
produce for us an immeasurably great Glory that will last forever"

2 Corinthians 4:17
NLT





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