Last night, we went to see "the imitation game."
Loved
 it. It's my favorite kind of movie: true story, insurmountable task, 
complicated main character. The hero's journey. Very well done. 
I
 never get tired of reading or watching "hero's journey" stories. The 
triumph of the human spirit. The same thing that rivets me to the 
Olympic Games. Doing the impossible. (if you are unfamiliar with the 
term "hero's journey," here are some other examples: Rocky, Star Wars, 
karate kid, Shawshank redemption, Lorenzo's oil). (please feel free to 
add a comment mentioning a hero's journey story that is a favorite of 
yours).
For
 22 years now, I've been attempting the impossible – to completely 
overcome a nasty autoimmune disease. A "chronic, incurable" illness. Of 
course, like running a four-minute mile, a thing will remain impossible 
until someone does it. Then, it either inspires others to do the same, 
or that person is written off as an idiot, a lunatic, a charlatan, a 
heretic, a liar...
What
 often happens with people who are able to overcome "incurable" diseases
 is they are dismissed by "authorities" with a remark along the lines 
of, "well they must've never had that disease in the first place. They 
must've been misdiagnosed."
In
 my 22 years of attempting the impossible, I haven't completely 
accomplished my goal, but I've had periods of really good health, 
getting free of all prescription medications. Already, that was 
"impossible," according to my doctors. 
I'm
 proud of this- and pleased to have basically done the equivalent of 
getting about halfway up Mount Everest - but I still don't have quite 
the quality of life that I want. And I will never give up until I do.
In fact I wear a necklace (which I never take off) that says "never never never give up."
I
 continue my quest for optimal health, and I no longer care what anyone 
thinks about my tactics. I don't believe that anything is impossible. In
 fact I take the word "impossible" as a challenge, like a glove to the 
face challenging me to a duel. 
This
 is my approach, and I do not expect everyone else to take the same 
approach. There's nothing wrong with learning ways to cope with an 
illness as opposed to fighting it. I choose to fight. By fight, I do not
 mean deny or "white knuckle" and suffer- I mean I  actively look for 
solutions. 
I
 was recently blocked from a lupus Facebook group. I can only think that
 it was because I was posting a bout alternative medicine and other 
solutions to lupus. I certainly didn't post anything offensive or attack
 anyone.
I
 am completely okay with having been kicked out of that group. It was a 
lot like the in person support groups from 20 years ago. Very 
problem-focused.
I
 joined forces with another person who was kicked out of that group for 
the same reasons, and we started a new page: cure for lupus. Typically, 
any page that mentions a "cure" for an illness is focused on raising 
money so that big Pharma can invent some kind of miracle drug for us. 
We
 are not waiting on a miracle drug. I don't believe there will ever be 
one for lupus. Our "cures" are natural and are about diet and 
alternative medicine- or anything that will restore balance and harmony 
in the body.
I'm just happy that after 22 years, I have found a fellow traveler with whom to climb "Mount Everest."
Carla
The Singing Patient
http://thesingingpatient.com/
The Singing Patient
http://thesingingpatient.com/
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