Doctors define MS as a chronic autoimmune disorder, but patients define Multiple Sclerosis in other ways. Upon receiving a positive diagnosis of MS, some people take it in stride, while others lash out at the news as if they have just been handed a death sentence. The initial diagnosis is usually instigated because of certain symptoms a person is noticing. These can come and go over a period of many years; never increasing in intensity or disability. With more than 50 symptoms attached to Multiple Sclerosis, any number can manifest at one time. One person might exhibit only one or two mild symptoms and another person could have 5 or 6 severe symptoms. Everyone is different, so the disease affects each body differently too.

Symptoms of MS include; blurred vision, blindness in one eye, red-green color distortion, numbness in arms and legs or even the face, tingling, difficulty walking, poor …