Haidut, I have always been curious about your neurological symptoms during this period. I think myself and others might be able to relate. Can you please describe them for us?
I mentioned them in a few of the earlier Danny Roddy podcasts. Weird tingling sensations in either one of the legs, temporary numbness that goes away and returns a few weeks later, alternating weakness in either one of the legs, sometimes blurred vision, inability to concentrate, trouble sleeping, agitation/nervousness, headaches, etc. Went for 3 separate MRIs reviewed by 4 different neurologists that did not know what the other said. Each one proposed different conditions, and the only thing in common was them saying "symptoms consistent with MS". However, since the MRI never showed any lesions I was never diagnosed with anything except "tension headaches". Had an MRI for unrelated reasons in 2016. Again, no lesions, or as they say in medical lingo - "unremarkable" (knock on wood!). My PCP thought I had meningitis spreading from chronic sinusitis to the brain, as I also had fever at the time, and stiffness in the neck. It would have been funny watching 5 doctors call each other idiots for the explanations they kept coming up with, if it was not so terrifying. Not sure what was worse - the weird and scary symptoms or the slow realization that no doctor really knew anything. Turns out my predicament was not unique. George Bernard Shaw wrote a play about it - "The Doctor's Dilemma".
https://raypeatforum.com/community/...ism-speed-not-pelvic-shape.12483/#post-281833
"...All that can be said for medical popularity is that until there is a practicable alternative to blind trust in the doctor, the truth about the doctor is so terrible that we dare not face it. Moliere saw through the doctors; but he had to call them in just the same. Napoleon had no illusions about them; but he had to die under their treatment just as much as the most credulous ignoramus that ever paid sixpence for a bottle of strong medicine."