Certainty is a fading flame in a failing body
“You should prepare for the future. Your son will never be independent.”
I do not recall hearing those words at their source, but I was only eight when they were relayed to me by my parents. At the time my diagnosis, now characterized as juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, was poorly understood and often confused with more virulent disabling neurological conditions. Despite this fact, I have used the doctor’s prediction as fuel for …
Certainty is a fading flame in a failing body









![Politics and fear have replaced science in U.S. pain management [PODCAST]](https://kevinmd.com/wp-content/uploads/11c2db8f-2b20-4a4d-81cc-083ae0f47d6e-190x100.jpeg)





![Why hospital systems fail to notice the human behind the bill [PODCAST]](https://kevinmd.com/wp-content/uploads/ea65fd1d-d282-4c46-a750-620a3c3bb42f-190x100.jpeg)

