Thanks :)* Actually, that's the strange thing about it to me: If
nobody told me I was diagnosed with cerebral palsy or had
physical therapy as a kid, and all the people who knew about it
didn't tell me: I wouldn't know. You wouldn't know. Nobody could
tell. I'm 100% normal.* Mentally strong, physically strong, no
issues.* I'm a little shy at parties but beyond that, nothing
that would classify me as different or odd really. So, whatever
they did, worked* Like, completely Yet, being aware of it... of
this super-effective treatment.. it makes me compassionate to
those that are less successful at "normal" for whatever reason.
Mental problems, drug abuse, physical problems, emotional
problems... too smart, too slow, too overtaken by addiction...
too lazy to get up and do anything. - whatever it is. I know I
could've been one of them. The only group I could never relate
to is "The Standard Plan for Boys": Go to school Go to college
Meet a girl somewhere in there. Get married Have kids. Have
career based on College major. Work your way up. After 40 years
at a single career, retire. Move to a golfing community. Get
cremated/buried, passing on inheritance to kids. Never
understood that life-plan. But anything else anybody does, I can
relate to.