Posted by Phillip Marx on January 6, 2000, at 14:04:08
In reply to Phillip has a sense of humor!, posted by Noa on January 6, 2000, at 6:17:11
How could I have been more to the point and still had my point missed? Re-synchronize target points. Target below: Center dot first. First concentric ring second. Second concentric ring third. Fourth: bales of hay backguard. Fifth: contest arena. Sixth: prizes for all participants.
Ann, There are some internet hints at what you are asking. The first one is almost congruent, had only a "not here" for an answer, but shows you aren't alone.
The second specifically identifies which part of the brain is damaged by an encephalitis (brain infection) that could be caused by a Herpes virus. These can be fatal if not treated with acyclovir. The danger stage is apparently synchronous with a hallucinatory or distorted, off-true, olfactory sense. Be prepared. A preserved sample specimen could uncapsize a diagnostic drift towards that direction. Presentation of such a sample to an actual urologist might be the smartest place to start next, since neuropsychiatrists are preoccupied with neuropsychiatric faults matched to symptoms.
Another related to actual hallucinations of smells, which ref I lost, too much of a stretch to apply to you, since yours seemed annoyingly persistent and oriented as to time and place, which isn't always a hallucination disqualifier. For thouroughness though, it should be in your information collection so that you can have your diagnosis re-centering rebuttals in place for oddball pitches and games. The faster that trash gets identified as trash, the faster it gets thrown out. If it's not true and they won't give it up, then bail out, find a plane with a better pilot.
The fourth is a localized brain seizure/false activation disorder they may very evasively try to rule-out. Patient worry avoidance tactics can result in patient sensitivity testing for a given subject that skirt the subject from such a distance you will never know what it is you might have had. Prep-up. Fix-up fears should be far less that never-fixed-up fears.
I'd draw the 3-D diagnostic tree-molecule-cloud, with the cloud envelope, the fog-globs and all, but my data bank is too empty from insufficient deposit. I'd be critically afraid to post it.
Hmmm. I'm not so sure what was funny. I try to put a little anti-depressant (humor) spin in nearly everything I write, maybe if I didn't spread it out so much I would do better. All this perception from the inside out stuff is interesting to me since I come from the world that looks at the inside from the outside. This is sure harder than fixing mere computers.
> >Also, I have an odd question-has anyone experienced that their urine smells like burnt rubber with use of Nardil? Kind of like after you eat asparagus. Good luck with your explorations.
>
> ann.
Burning rubber smell (urine?)A nearly identical question from elsewhere.
I might add, is it a sulphurous burning rubber?
Any sulphates from foods or pills being excreted? Any nervous eraser chewing? Any unstable enemies near your food? Twinkies?
> > I’m going to be asleep in a few minutes so I can’t say more.
> >
> > Lucky us.
> >
> > pm
>
> Phillip, LOL. I am glad to see you have a good sense of humor.Though I'm glad to have something that gets me to sleep real fast if I run around my block, sometimes I'd like to learn to stretch it a few minutes more easily.
pm p.s. Fun sites showing the perceptions of those with "outside-in" perspective:http://www.crd.ge.com/esl/cgsp/projects/medical/
http://www.williamcalvin.com/
http://www.med.harvard.edu/AANLIB/home.html
http://www.indiana.edu/~primate/
http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/nn/web-pubs/htmlbook96/
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/research/visible/
http://metalab.unc.edu/jstrout/uploading/MUHomePage.html
http://www-hbp.scripps.edu/HBP_html/HBPsites.html
http://sulcus.berkeley.edu/
http://www.wjh.harvard.edu/~kwn/kosslab.html
http://www.bic.mni.mcgill.ca/
http://hebb.uoregon.edu/brainlab/belHome.html
http://www.wlu.edu/~web/bp/brainpk.html
http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/ehc.html
http://www.neuropsychologycentral.com/index.html
http://www.neuroscience.cnter.com/
http://www.neuroguide.com/
http://neuro-www2.mgh.harvard.edu/MIND/Poetry/submit.html
http://neuro.med.cornell.edu/VL/
I can't get a couple of others to still work, later maybe. A few of these are really different from when I last looked. Endless mindfullness.
pm
poster:Phillip Marx
thread:17762
URL: http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/20000101/msgs/18212.html