Diagnosed with Progressive Relapsing Multiple Sclerosis, Joseph Wouk refuses to accept the doctor’s opinion that there is nothing more to be done for his medical condition.
He plans to go to the Amazon to try to cure himself with a Shaman’s ayahuasca ceremony.
Told with humor and honesty, Wouk pulls the reader through his thought processes as he watches his mind dissolve from the subcortical dementia caused by his particular variety of MS.
Right before he is scheduled to leave for Peru, all his MS symptoms suddenly disappear from his taking LDN.
Google LDN ! is Wouk’s attempt at Dana Paramita, the Buddhist version of Christian “good works”.
You’ll laugh and cry through the first part of the book and be inspired by the second part.
A man who refuses to give up in the face of insurmountable odds ends up completely healed despite the hopelessness that western medicine tells him he faces.
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By Joseph Wouk
Dec 18, 2008
"From the Low Dose Naltrexone Yahoo Newsgroup" Gotta say Bob I support Joe 100%. LDN needs a person like this. Good writer, passionate, enthusiastic, intelligent, willing to mix it up with the establishment. I'll bet most here feel the same, especially those who have been members of other health/ LDN groups and been bashed and ridiculed after posting their experience and success with LDN. Try calling the National Multiple Sclerosis Society for example and ask them about LDN. If you were ill with a serious disease like MS their answer would make you want to vomit and worse. If the medical community and pharmaceutical companies truly wanted to help and cure sick people why aren't they investigating LDN?!! The answer is they can't make money! We're supposed to take their useless poisonous medicine, wind up in wheelchairs and drop dead. Do you know how this makes me and all the others who are ill feel? A bit frigging angry! And because we are just the little people out here... More > we are we are helpless. A guy like Joe comes across as a hero to me. Finally an LDN advocate that uses words like brass knuckles to the mind and heart. The laid back approach doesn't work anymore. I hope it never happens to you but should you ever get seriously ill you'll then understand why I feel the way I do. Art< Less