|

Support
Lines
Vol. 2 Number 3 February 3, 2004
Visit us
on the Web at http://www.pabia.org
Subscribe or unsubscribe
here.
View previous editions online here.
|
"Victory goes to
the player who makes the next-to-last mistake."
-Chessmaster
Savielly grigorievitch tartakower (1887-1956) |
Inside This Issue:
-
Web
Updates
-
New
Peer Support Focus Group Forming
Bi-Monthly
meetings beginning Monday, February 9, 2004
-
Internships Available For Students with Disabilities
-
Editor's Note
-
Talk Back!-Greetings from Cape Town South
Africa
-
Book Review: Live Safely in a Dangerous World
How to beat
the odds of dying in an accident.
-
In
Another Eyes -a poem by Shirley Casey,
Dublin Ireland
-
Cognitive Dissonance V -by John Pistorius
-
Brain Injury Advocacy Coalition Meeting
Pennsylvania Protection and
Advocacy, Inc.
-
PABIA Meeting Brief -February 3, 2004
-
Free Eye Care Resources
-
Pittsburgh Area Meeting Notices
-
Thank You! -The people who make it all
possible.
-
PABIA-NEWS Subscriber Policy
-
Subscribe/Unsubscribe Instructions
|
Did someone forward you this newsletter?
Would you like to subscribe? You can sign up to the PABIA-NEWS on
the PABIA website at
http://www.pabia.org/. You will receive an email message
requesting a response from you in order to confirm your
subscription. You can unsubscribe there too. We appreciate and
welcome your feedback and suggestions. Please send a message with
your comments to jp@pabia.org |
PABIA
Website Overhauled!
Navigation Page Improves
Accessibility.
Our
webmaster has been busy, busy, busy! He has revamped the PABIA website.
With seventy-five web pages in the PABIA web, the
Navigation page offers
visitors a one stop access to every page on the site. What a bonus. No
more hunting for that page you want to reach. The
navigation link is in
the left side column of every page for easy access.
Also
renewed on the site:
Support Group Development Tools. This is where visitors can find
sample Meeting Notice Posters, Brochures, Directional Signs, sample
Press Releases, Welcome Posters, Meeting Evaluation Forms and more.
Our
Survivor Tales Pages are chock full of courageous stories of
tenacity and human resolve to overcome the barriers to full
participation in society. Everyone is encouraged to submit their tale
for possible publication.
Previous editions of the PABIA-NEWS, Support Lines email newsletter can
be found at
Newsletter Archives.
Please let us know what you want to see if you do not find it on our
site. We aim to serve you information that is relevant, interesting and
up-to-date.
Soon to be developed-Interactive Bulletin Board.
Success is not all wins. It's about
winning more often than losing. It's about picking yourself up,
dusting yourself off, learning from what doesn't work and
persevering.
-Michael
Angier, SuccessNet
|
New
Peer Support Focus Group Forming
Bi-Monthly
meetings beginning Monday, February 9, 2004
This
group is specifically aimed at
addressing the interests and needs of adults recovering from Brain
Injury who are facing the challenge of professional role continuation,
and those who seek reintegration into educational and career settings.
Individuals striving to overcome the hidden
consequences of Brain Injury to achieve or maintain increased levels of
independence and community functioning may benefit and are encouraged to
attend.
This peer directed, professionally
facilitated meeting is being formed as a collaborative endeavor between
members of the BRAIN TRUST and University of Pittsburgh faculty and
graduate students in partnership with the TBI Model Systems Grant
Project.
Under the
direction of Michael McCue, PhD. and Mike Pramuka, PhD, Ramona Ragano
has agreed to facilitate these meetings for approximately one year in
return for course credit.
University
of Pittsburgh Doctoral Candidate Lisa Taubman, along with Malin
Lowenadler-Shadel and John Pistorius of the BRAIN TRUST will work in
partnership with Ms. Ragano directing the new support group effort.
Anyone interested in attending this meeting
or helping to create or facilitate new peer support groups, please
click here to contact John Pistorius.
We have free tools available for people
interested in developing a peer support group or focus group meeting.
Members of the BRAIN TRUST provide hands on assistance,
email newsletter notification, aid in generating
Meeting Notice Posters,
Brochures,
Press Releases and
much more.
|
Victory is sweetest when you've known defeat.-
Malcolm Forbes |
INTERNSHIPS AVAILABLE FOR STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES
HalfthePlanet Foundation seeks two
undergraduate or graduate level students with disabilities to serve as
part-time (8-10 hours/week) interns. These internships will involve work
on a new HalfthePlanet Foundation program, entitled Beyond
Participation, which provides training and technical assistance to three
mainstream youth organizations working to be more inclusive of young
people with disabilities. Click here for
More information on
this job.
|
There is one thing in this world, which you must never forget to do.
Human beings come into this world to do particular work. That work
is their purpose, and each is specific to the person. If you forget
everything else and not this, there's nothing to worry about. If you
remember everything else and forget your true work, then you will
have done nothing in your life.
-Rumi |
Editor's Note
John Pistorius
Someone recently asked me, "Why do you do this John? Why spend your time
and money within the peer support effort?" My answer---It pleases me to
help others in their recovery journey, and I want to keep peer-to-peer
support alive.
During the almost twenty years of my involvement, I've become intimately
aware of the need for ongoing support. In the beginning, I received much
more than I gave. This group is the number one most important factor in
my own recovery. Volunteering has stimulated my mind, increased my
skills and improved my outcome. I cannot over stress this point.
Helping others has always been a passion of mine. The work that I do to
help people who experience Brain Injury satisfies me, because I get to
see results.
Sometimes, a person finds needed funding for critical independent living
assistance. Other times, friendships are made. Sharing information
improves lives. Helping others to realize their ability to direct
themselves to overcome recovery obstacles is very gratifying. I know
where some of the keys to unlock the chains are and I can point people
to them. Of course, it's up to them to reach out and take hold of the
key and unlock whatever it is that holds them. It is like leading horses
to water. Many decide to drink of the water that gives them life.
The
Pittsburgh Area Brain Injury Alliance has stood the test of time. While
the PABIA may not meet everyone's needs, we certainly do have a purpose
in the lives of hundreds of subscribers, meeting attendees, and
thousands of visitors to the
www.pabia.org website. And that means something to me. My time is
well spent.
I
owe a great deal of thanks to many people. Most especially to Andrea
Williams for her belief in me when I didn't believe in myself. Without
her leading, I might have quit volunteering long ago. Without her
direction and sometimes constructive criticism, I'd have drifted off
course. Without her vision of Empowerment for the people who experience
Brain Injury, and all people with disabilities, the world would be a
darker place today. Thanks for being that beacon my friend.
In
turn, I enjoy encouraging others to face their fears to overcome the
barriers to their full enjoyment of life. And that motivates me to
continue. In the end, I want to know that I have done everything
possible to help others to reach their fullest potential. -jp
|
Rebellion against your handicaps gets you nowhere. Self-pity gets
you nowhere. One must have the adventurous daring to accept oneself
as a bundle of possibilities and undertake the most interesting game
in the world---making the most of one's best.
-Harry Emerson Fosdick, D.D. |
Talk
Back!
Greetings From
Cape Town, South Africa
How I wish we had enthusiastic groups such
as your own in SA. I advertised in a local newspaper and got zero
response, to start a support group for survivors of near drowning
children with brain injury.
All
the best with the wonderful work you do!!!
Yours most sincerely,
Sheila Belcher
|
Obstinacy in opinions holds the dogmatist in the chains of error,
without hope of emancipation.
-John C. Granville |
Book
Review: Live Safely in a Dangerous World
How to beat the
odds of dying in an accident.
First, I want to thank Roy Vachino for donating this wonderful soft
cover book. It is a powerful resource for common sense safety approaches
to just about every possible topic from adult sports to trampolines and
everything in between.
This
book provides 127 easy to read articles with practical insight into
important accident prevention and safety information. Following the
strategies in this guide can save your life.
Accidents account for more than 90,000 deaths in America each year.
Millions more are disabled, many permanently. Live Safely in a
Dangerous World identifies daily hazards and supplies easy
prevention strategies.
In
the home safety category, according to recent National Safety Council
statistics, poisonings are the number one cause of deaths in the home at
9,700. Next is falls, then fires and burns, suffocation, and drowning.
Firearms cause 400 deaths each year in the home. Nearly 30,000 persons
die each year in and around their homes and almost 7 million suffer
temporary or permanent disabling injuries in home related incidents.
More disabling accidents occur at home than in motor vehicle accidents
and in the workplace combined.
The
author says, "Most accidents can be better described as failures,
failures on our part and failures on the part of others." He offers
advice on creating an individualized personal safety plan as a key to a
safer lifestyle for every member of the family.
Based on statistics from the National Safety Council and birth rates,
the author states that we have 1-in-45 odds of dying in an accident.
That is a good reason to learn how to live safer.
For
children under age 15, bicycle riding is the number one cause of
injuries, with basketball, football and baseball following closely. Lets
promote the use of helmets!
This
book is a must have for anyone wanting to learn more about safety and
avoiding 'accidents.' Anyone interested in obtaining a copy can contact
Roy Vachino at (412) 563-6990.
|
You give but little when you give of your possessions. It is when
you give of yourself that you truly give.
-Kahlil Gibran |
In Another Eyes
Shirley Casey, Dublin, Ireland
In another eyes, I’m somebody who could not
do any wrong
They find it hard to let go, they thought if they did,
What would happen to me.
Being the youngest, it was hard,
But in another eyes, I would be young forever and never grow up!
When it was my time to leave home, they were afraid for me,
But in another eyes, knowing that I would be fine!
Now, that I’m all growing up to a young woman,
I have a bit more knowledge of life
But in another eyes, I’m great.
|
As
long as our civilization is essentially one of property, of fences,
of exclusiveness, it will be mocked by delusions.
-Ralph Waldo
Emerson |

Cognitive Dissonance V
I am the Commander
John Pistorius
Just out of high school, at the age of eighteen, I
believed my life was right on track. I was following in my dad’s
footsteps and planned to enlist in the military after the holidays.
Then, as a passenger in a fiery auto crash New Years Eve 1976-77, my
destination was forever changed.
Instead of boot camp, I found myself in a hospital. I was too busted up
to realize the stark contrast that the new evidence presented to my
goals and beliefs. I believed back surgery to fuse vertebrae together
dashed any hope that I had for getting into the military. It changed my
ideas about the amount of pain a person can tolerate, and ended my
relationship with my girlfriend.
By age twenty, in 1978, I was learning to renovate old homes with few
clues about what I was going to do with my life. Four thugs gave me
direction when they beat me unconscious and sent me to the hospital with
my face broken. After surgery and a month of hospitalization, I returned
to my ‘life.’ I was deeply affected and withdrew into the arms of a
woman who would later become my wife.
In 1980, after spending the entire day with me, my best friend, age 21,
was killed minutes after leaving my home. I was called to the scene to
identify his mangled, lifeless body. Massive head trauma and blood loss
swept him away in the blink of an eye.
In 1983, at age twenty-five, I was married with children and my goals
were set. My career was developing. I saw a bright future in buying and
renovating old homes in the South Side of Pittsburgh. And then again, in
an instant, my life was forever altered when I was hit by a car driven
by a man who was drunk.
Why share this?
I
don’t want sympathy or pity. Don’t even go there. I’m telling you these
things to substantiate my claim of understanding the process of
overcoming pained states of mind.
Each of these incidents caused a great deal of Cognitive Dissonance. Not
that I understood it then. Nevertheless, in retrospect, I can understand
it now. Each time, I was forced to view my life from a different
perspective. New evidence boldly contradicted my current belief or
outlook, thereby causing a pained state of mind. The challenge was to
overcome the obstructions to my ability to live life peacefully. It was
my choice. I was able to overcome the visible evidence that gave me
grounds for believing the existence or presence of something else by
directing my thought energy away from my inabilities and onto my
abilities.
I could have stopped living when my life was changed by these events.
Instead, I adapted. Part of my ability to adjust came from my adoption
of confident, constructive thinking techniques. I thought my way out of
these battles. The difference between my ideas, beliefs and opinions and
new evidence that confronted my beliefs was the barrier that I
rigorously fought.
Ok, I realized that I was not going to have a military career. So I
started working in construction. I watered my attitude and thinking with
my ability to learn new things. Then, after the thugs jumped me, I
decided to settle down, marry, and raise a family and I went back into
construction. After my best friend’s death, I realized the line between
life and death was much finer than I had ever imagined, and I became
almost reclusive. After the drunk driver running me down, I started
buying and renovating homes using my limited knowledge of construction
and seeking information from others.
Goals-Beliefs-Choices
I
believed that I was on track with my goals. Each time I faced new
evidence that gave me grounds for believing something contrary to my
accepted position, I chose to accept or reject the new information.
When
the orthopedic surgeon told me that my spinal injury was not going to
permit me to be in construction, I chose to disagree with him. Instead,
I worked to strengthen the muscles that support the spine. The
construction work strengthened my back.
Plastic surgery repaired the damaged bone in my face that resulted from
the attack in 1978. So the predictions of ugliness and deformity were
overcome by excellent surgeons. That was all it took to overcome that
batch of new evidence.
Cognitive retraining and the deliberate planting of statements which
affirmed my abilities were the fertilizer to my positive attitude. This
combination of professional assistance, attitude adjustment and thought
planting amounted to digging in, planting, fertilizing and watering my
thought garden. And it propelled me forward with resolve after the car
ran me down in 1983. It didn’t happen overnight. The process of
overcoming the stark contrast in my thinking was one that fluctuated,
sometimes dramatically.
More Dissonance
And then, in 1986, just when I thought that I was right on track, my
wife decided that she would be happier with someone else. She claimed
that the 1983 accident had changed me beyond her recognition. I wasn’t
the guy that she married. She claimed that her husband died and she was
left with someone who looked like him but didn’t act like him. This was
the same year that my parents bought their pet shop.
Throughout the following six years, using some very intelligent lawyers,
she dismantled my income, my real estate and my self-confidence. I was
able to overcome so much adversity before, but somehow this was the
toughest battle of my lifetime. In retrospect, I believe it was because
divorce opposed my core values. My parents have been married for almost
fifty years. When we married, I thought that I was going to be married
to her for the rest of my life. Then, in short order, I was facing very
real circumstances which refuted my core belief.
She was so angry about losing her husband in that accident. She wanted
to punish me for taking his life and his place in hers. Therefore, no
matter what I conceded to, she kept pushing for more. This was a stark
contrast to the mild-mannered woman that she projected herself to be.
Mosquitoes are friendlier.
My ex-wife was relentless in her punishment. Almost like the thugs, who
years earlier had kicked me when I was down, she just kept pursuing me.
It was as if she demanded that I fight back. Yet I did not have the will
to fight. Even if I had possessed the desire, I was without funds. I
only wanted it to end. I was so tired of her attacks. How could I
overcome this opponent? She knew my weaknesses and was adept at sharing
them with her lawyers. Together, they were relentless. The stress
reduced my ability to function in my defense.
Chains of Thought
All through my life, when I thought about my future, I had disconcerting
thoughts which were partially influenced by well-meaning people who told
me that I would ‘always be’ something or other. Those ‘all’ or
‘absolute’ statements had an effect on me because I trusted the people
who made them. They were the experts.
Doctors told me that I would always ‘be’ something or other. Surgeons
told me that I would ‘never’ do certain things. Because of cognitive
impairments, therapists told me that I must remember that I would
‘always’ be slower. I had no evidence to refute their claims, yet, their
ideas did not fit into my beliefs about me. As new evidence emerged that
was contrary to their statements, I was challenged. I rebelled against
their ideas, yet was still plagued by the nagging that they presented.
The thoughts that they had planted confronted me and required energy to
refute them, and that was a waste of resources. So I started seeking
relief from every source possible.
New Tools Developed to Excavate Dissonance
During the six years of the divorce battle, I sought techniques and
strategies to overcome these nagging negative thoughts which were
stealing my effectiveness. I built an arsenal of tools as soldiers to
overcome these formidable thought opponents of mine. And the war took on
new meaning and direction. New people entered my life. Some of them were
trained to help me fight the ideas that were beating me. I did not
always win every battle, but my win-loss ratio improved. With every win,
my confidence improved. And I came to realize that I really could
accomplish this task of changing my opinions and beliefs. My mental
acceptance and views on particular ideas, thoughts and subjects began to
be transformed.
I learned to be the governor of my thoughts. Often, my convictions were
overturned and I was pardoned. With each release, I was inspired to free
my mind from additional obstructions to clear thinking.
I
learned to not be anxious about tomorrow and I’m still learning to have
peace by living in the moment. This moment is all that we really have,
none other. It is the eternal moment, when you finally come into harmony
with reality. It is the only place where we have any control over the
only thing that we have real control over, our attitude.
Each time a tragedy occurred I fought back. I’ve repeatedly lived
through the process and have developed a deep understanding about
overcoming the pained state of mind called Cognitive Dissonance. I
learned by experience that it is possible to overcome Cognitive
Dissonance by uprooting and burning the weed thoughts and shooting down
and burying the thought soldiers that defend them. I learned to plant
deliberate, precise thoughts to fight the battle from within my
subconscious mind. And I taught myself how to water and fertilize those
ideas with others that reinforced their growth.
Armed with a legion of new evidence, I was confronted with a challenge
that extended beyond the surface. The deep-seated beliefs which I was
not yet able to erase were lingering in the dark recesses of my thought
garden. Like hidden monsters, they would come forward to fight at any
moment to defend core beliefs. They had to be overcome, yet they proved
to be elusive. Nevertheless, I came to realize that they belonged to me
too. That was a real turning point. These were my thoughts even if I had
accepted them from others.
Next time: Tools to overpower the monsters and Self-Command.
|
No
man is free who is not master of himself.
-epictetus |
BRAIN INJURY ADVOCACY COALITION MEETING
Pennsylvania Protection and
Advocacy, Inc.
When: FEBRUARY 11,
2004
Time: 10:30 am to 2:00 pm
Place: PP&A, 1414 N. Cameron St., Harrisburg
Admission: Free
TOPIC:
Parking: Free Parking
Contact: Deborah Delgado 1-800-692-7443 X117 or email
ddelgado@ppainc.org
Agenda-
Discussion Facilitator
is Carol Horowitz from The Disabilities Law Project
| I am only one; but I am still
one. I cannot do everything, but still I can do something. I will
not refuse to do the something I can do. -Helen
Keller |
PABIA Meeting Brief
February
3, 2004
Nearly
thirty people were in attendance as Dr. Frances Bruce Marion presented,
Mend The Mind, Mind The
Body, Meet the Soul. In his brief presentation, Dr. Bruce explained how
our bodies are wired for healing. After the
presentation, attendees, gravitated into smaller groups for discussion.
One
participant picked up Bruce's guitar and strummed out a few songs while
others sat and chatted.
If you were unable to
attend and would like to view the videotape, please contact Ed Crinnion
at (412) 761-9870 or evc@pabia.org.
| There is no man so low down that
the cure for his condition does not lie strictly within himself.
-Thomas L.
Masson |
Free Eye Care
If
you or a loved one needs eye care, but cannot afford it, the following
organizations can help:
-
American Academy of Ophthalmology (AAO), National Eye Care Project
for those 65 and older. Visit
www.aao.org or call toll free, 1-800-222-3937.
-
American Optometric Association, Vision USA, for low income
families and children. Visit
www.aoanet.org or call toll free 1-800-766-4466 for more
information.
-
Lions Club International Foundation Visit
www.lcif.org or call 1-630-571-5466.
|
To be
nobody-but-yourself---in a world which is doing its best, night and
day, to make you everybody but yourself---means to fight the hardest
battle which any human being can fight, and never stop fighting.
-E.
E. Cummings |
Pittsburgh Area Brain Injury Alliance
Upcoming Meeting and Social Event
Notices
Next Pittsburgh Area meeting date:
Tuesday, March 2, 2004
TIME:
7:00 P.M.
TOPIC: Planning for the Future: Dollars and Cents, with Maria
Smith, Director of Family Trust-ACHIEVA.
PLACE: 1323 Forbes Avenue, Pittsburgh Near Mercy Hospital and AJ
Palumbo Center
ADMISSION: Free
PARKING: Free Parking Lot adjacent to the building.
Contact: Ed Crinnion at 412.761.9870 or John Pistorius at
412.481.5482.
Refreshments provided.
The next Indiana Twp. meeting date:
Tuesday, February 9, 2004
Time:
7:00 P.M.
Place: the McLaughlin Education Center of HealthSouth,
Harmarville.
Admission: Free
TOPIC: Peer Support
Parking: Free Parking in the HealthSouth Parking Garage
Contact: Tom Byrnes at 412-531-0343 or Ann Ciotoli at 412-828-1300
Refreshments provided.
The next Monroeville Area meeting date:
Thursday, February 12, 2004
TIME:
7:00 P.M.
PLACE: Cross Roads Presbyterian Church, 2310 Haymaker Road,
Monroeville, Pa.
TOPIC: Peer Support Discussion with brief Video Presentation.
ADMISSION: Free
PARKING: Free parking lot adjacent to the building.
Contact: Denise Patterson at
deenomad@aol.com or Paul Damon at 412.372.2888
Refreshments provided.
New-
Indiana County Brain Injury
Support Group
When:
Thursday, February 19, 2004
Time: 7 to 9 pm
Topic: "The Hidden Scars from a TBI (Traumatic BRAIN Injury).
Physical, Mental and Social, and the New Challenges of life ever." with
ED Crinnion - Pittsburgh Area Brain Injury Alliance - Coordinator and
Brain Injury Association of Pennsylvania - Board of Directors 2000-2005
Place: Indian Haven Community Home, 1675 Saltsburg Ave., Indiana, PA
15701
Admission: Free
Parking: Free Parking Lot adjacent to the building.
Contact: Becky Myers 724.349.5934 or BILL Compton 724.639.9416
Western PA BIM / HS
Recreational Bowling League
Where: Fun Fest Entertainment Center, 2525 Freeport Road,
Pittsburgh, PA 15238
WHEN: Monday Feb 23rd, March 22nd and April 19th.
COST: $7 per person, Bowl 3 games, Includes shoes, 2 slices of
Pizza & unlimited fountain drinks.
TIME: 3:30 PM TO 6:30 PM on Lanes #35 to 40
Bowling at Fun Fest is Wheel Chair Accessible and there are Bowling
Ramps.
For more information contact Tom Byrnes at 412-531-0343.
|
The long span of the
bridge of your life is supported by countless cables called habits,
attitudes, and desires. What you do in life depends upon what you
are and what you want. What you get from life depends upon how much
you want it-how much you are willing to work and plan and co-operate
and to use your resources. The long span of the bridge of your life
is supported by countless cables that you are spinning now, and that
is why today is such an important day. Make the cables strong!
-L.
G. Elliott |
Thank You!
These are the people that make it possible.
Ed Crinnion (412)
761-9870-
for your untiring efforts in keeping the
Pittsburgh Area Brain Injury Alliance together, funding our website and
supplying refreshments for PABIA meetings.
Dr. Bruce
(412) 921-3711-
for your enlightened perspective on
healing Mind, Body and Soul.
Jim
Sproat and realty Counseling Co. Inc.
(412) 381-1166-
for your support of the PABIA-NEWS, electronic
newsletter and for the use of your digital camera. We greatly appreciate
your help. Anyone interested in contacting Jim to thank him personally,
can call or visit his website at
http://www.realtycounseling.com.
Denise Patterson and
Paul Damon (412)
372-2888-
for your ongoing coordination of
the Monroeville area Peer Support Group.
Ann Ciotoli, MaryAnn
Stritmatter
412-828-1300 and
Tom Byrnes (412)
531-0343-for
your ongoing commitment to peer support.
PABIA-NEWS Contributors-
your insight, articles, poems and comments are vital to the success of
this publication.
| Our business in life is not to
get ahead of others, but to get ahead of ourselves--to break our own
records, to outstrip our yesterday by our today, to do our work with
more force than ever before.
-Stewart B. Johnson |
PABIA-NEWS
Subscriber Policy
We aim to inform, inspire and empower people
to be their best. We value every subscriber and respect your privacy.
Our subscriber list is NOT made available to anyone for any reason. We
do not sell, rent or loan our mailing lists. If you find this newsletter
to be of value, we invite and encourage you to forward it (in its
entirety, please) to your friends. Sometimes people choose to stop
receiving "PABIA-News". You may unsubscribe at any time by following the
instructions provided at the end of this message. We don’t want to send
this to anyone who doesn’t wish to receive it, and we will make every
good faith effort to remove you if you notify us of your intent to be
removed.
| He conquers who conquers
himself.
-Latin proverb |
Subscribe/Unsubscribe Instructions
Visit:
http://www.pabia.org/ and click on the subscribe/unsubscribe link
and follow the simple procedure on our list server's form to add or
remove yourself.
or
To Subscribe-
Send a blank email to:
PABIA-NEWS-SUBSCRIBE-REQUEST@LISTSERV.TBINET.ORG (your Subject: line
may say JOIN)
To Unsubscribe-
send a blank
email to
PABIA-NEWS-SIGNOFF-REQUEST@LISTSERV.TBINET.ORG (your Subject: line
may say REMOVE)
| There is little that can
withstand a man who can conquer himself.
-Louis XIV |
'Till next time, Seek to be and remain
Barrier-Free.
|