I'm going to do this in stages .... so this will be about how I contracted Lyme and my symptoms through the years. I was infected about 35 years ago, so it's just too much for one post.

My mom and step-father moved us out to the country from 1972-1975. I got countless tick bites and all the ticks were removed improperly. Some thought that the best way to remove them was to apply heat to force the tick to let go, so this is what my step-father did.
The proper way to remove a tick is with tweezers. If you use heat, you force the tick to regurgitate any toxins it's carrying into your body.
I was always the child who had the most illnesses. Many times I would get sick and no one else in the family would. I was considered to be a hypochondriac with a low threshold of pain, because surely I wasn't any sicker than anyone else.
I had very few Lyme symptoms ... mainly fatigue and sensitivity to heat and sunshine.
When I was in college in 1982, I had several stressful events happen all around the same time. Within a few months I would only get out of bed to go to class. Finally, my roommate was so concerned that she dragged me to the hospital. I did not think anything was abnormal myself, but she could see something was wrong.
The doctor, knowing I was a college student, took some blood tests then told me not to drink so much.
That next summer, I went home, but could not find a job (we lived in another college town and there was just not enough work). So, I had a relaxing summer eating right, hanging out by the pool, exercising daily, and spending a lot of time with a very good friend who really cared.
By the time I got back to school I was back to having minimal symptoms.
The same thing happened again in 1986.
In 1991, it happened again. This time it lasted a little longer, so my doctor did some bloodwork. I was healthy. A few months before I had a mystery ailment that sent me to the ER. I was at a Museum with my sister and her husband. I came down with intense stomach cramping, so I sat down for a while. Finally, I told them we needed to leave .... by midnight, hubby took me to the ER.
They took my blood pressure laying down, then standing up. I had the reaction that indicates dehydration (it also happens with Lyme), so they gave me an IV and sent me home. It took a week to recover.
So, after my doctor had all my bloodwork come back normal, he said it was just some leftover fatigue from the "flu" I had sick months earlier that sent me to the ER. The fatigue was debilitating. It didn't make sense, so I kept looking.
That was not my only mystery ER visit ... I just stopped going after a while because I knew they would find nothing wrong with me.
This was pre-internet, so my research was more difficult, but I finally learned that mercury toxicity can have this affect and so can candida. I would have worse symptoms when I would grind my teeth, so mercury sounded like it could be a big part of the problem.
I found a mercury-free dentist (
www.mercuryfreedentists.com) and had my amalgams removed in stages. I took his detox protocol as well to help my body get rid of the metals. After each removal I felt like I had the flu.
I also went on the anti-candida diet and an elimination diet.
After a few months I felt good. I kept eating healthy and took supplements. I was health food nut because I felt better that way. I was always aware of detoxing.
I was fine from 1991-2003 ... I had a few symptoms, but nothing that I thought was out of the ordinary -- neck pain, allergies, lower back pain, intermittent fatigue. Things would get bad when I was pregnant, but I attributed that to pregnancy. Looking back, they were Lyme symptoms.
In 2003 I got an unrelated illness and was under a lot of stress over owning two homes ... one being up for sale for WAY too long. I took 21 days of doxycycline for that illness.
Doxy is one of the drugs used for Lyme, so I think the abx along with the stress stirred it up again.
After the 21 days, I still had incredible fatigue. Within a few weeks, I got knee pain so bad that I couldn't bend my left knee ... if I sat down, I had to prop it up. I also would get pain in my thumbs.
I thought it might be a candida overgrowth from the abx, so I went on a strict anti-candida diet and it did help. Simple carbs also feed Lyme bacteria, so that is probably why.
I just didn't get better. I read in a book that if you eat a food every day, you most likely are allergic to it. So I cut out wheat for a couple weeks. It made me sick when I cut it out, then again when I challenged it.
This book said that after a few months, you might be able to eat the food you are allergic to .... so I reintroduced wheat and had no trouble if I ate it a couple times per week.
My health was still declining ... I started losing weight, about 15 pounds in 4 months. I was thin already. I went to the GI, and he, of course, thought I had celiac ... it seemed obvious ... I couldn't tolerate wheat and I was losing weight.
All my tests came back negative. I went gluten-free anyway, then casein-free, corn-free, and soy-free. I still didn't get better. I did stop losing weight, but the joint pain, fatigue, muscle aches, etc. did not end and progressively got worse.
I also had air hunger, drenching night sweat, and heart palpitations.
I ended up on the same thread as Donna. That is where I discovered my Lyme Disease.
In the meantime, my doctor told me I had adrenal fatigue and somatization disorder (it was all in my head). I had IGeneX send the test kit to my house and took it to my doctor. She gave me the test, but even with me having over 40 of the symptoms and a positive test, she still told me it was somatization disorder, not Lyme. Doctors are very uneducated when it comes to Lyme Disease.
I found an LLMD in NY to treat me. He said I definately have it and my test shows I have had it for a very long time. I also got a clinical diagnosis of babesia. The blood tests only test for three strains of babs, but there are about 30, so it's a clinical diagnosis, as is Lyme.
I am also having my TMJ Disorder treated right now. TMJ problems are a symptom of Lyme, but for people like me who also have a structural problem, it's still something that needs to be fixed. Some people don't have the structural problem, but just the pain from the Lyme. My TMJ pain was always the worst when my Lyme was active.
More later.