Read the latest Overcoming MS news, blogs and stories. Discover ideas and inspiration to help you live well with MS.
Since dealing with MS (from my late 30s) I have learned how to stretch out and gently work on less able and willing limbs in the warmth of an indoor pool.
I always ate what I enjoyed regardless of any potential health hazards. But a few years into my diagnosis I experienced a particularly frightening relapse.
Dairy farming was part of the landscape and I never dreamt I would one day give up cheese and creamy foods to give myself a chance of recovering from MS.
I find myself sitting in the disabled section as I prepare for the headline act of rock, metal festival download. As I sit, I think about how short life is.
I am sure many fellow MSers can relate when I say that doing the housework takes a long time, and involves a lot of sit-downs.
A friend read somewhere that 'journaling' was really good for your health. I knew she meant well, so I readily promised her I’d look into it.
“We’ve found an abnormality in your brain.” Say what? These were the last words I expected to hear three weeks before our wedding...
From the same time I was seeing my GP regarding my oddly behaving right foot, I enrolled in a tertiary accredited Counselling Diploma course in Brisbane.
Whether it was a working lunch, a garden party, or a sit-down supper, many of you answered our call to take part in our first-ever Overcoming MS Global Dinner Party.
When I was first diagnosed with MS two years ago, I received some aggressive treatments in the hospital. These treatments appeared to backfire.
I hate flaxseed oil. I have a choice, of course. I don’t have to use it. But I follow Overcoming MS, and Professor Jelinek recommends 20mls or more daily
I remember the first year with MS being very hard. I lived in fear: fear of stigma, fear of being seen differently, as ill.
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