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ALS: Anyone’s
  L
ife Story”
May 2007
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MDA’s ALS Division introduces you to 31 people  - one each day for the month of May - who are living with ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis or Lou Gehrig’s disease). 

This series was inspired by Augie Nieto, ALS Division Co-Chairperson, who says that since his ALS diagnosis, instead of striving for success, his goal each day is to be significant.

In their own words, otherwise “ordinary” people describe the impact of living with a progressive, incurable and deadly disease. But their stories also tell how ALS has brought new significance to their lives in ways that you might not expect. 

ALS can become anyone’s life story. Please join MDA’s world-leading effort to stop it. 

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Lee Abramson

Name: Lee Abramson

City, State: East Lansing, MI

Age: 36

Family:
Father – Paul Abramson (69)
Mothers – Janet Abramson (64)
Sister – Heather Krasna (33)

Hobbies/Interests: Cooking (Eastern, Greek, Chinese, Thai, Ethiopian, Indian, Mexican, French, Italian, Indian and Southern style comfort food); web design; Bible study; listening to, analyzing and composing music; watching movies; listening to audio books and podcasts; reading news; playing cards online and drinking expensive whiskey (in moderation)

Date of ALS diagnosis: February, 2005

Life before ALS: I grew up in Michigan and receive a BA in Psychology from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.  After college, I moved to Austin, Texas to pursue my musical interests, and for three years played bass in a touring rock band called Punchy.  My main income source was being a technical support analyst at Lotus/IBM, but I was also an entrepreneur, becoming the first ever person to sell pork rinds on the internet, through a site called Porkrind.com.  Porkrind.com is still the number one hit website when you query “pork rinds” in Google or Yahoo.

Life with ALS: With the onset of symptoms, I was no longer employed and gradually started losing mobility, moving from one cane to two canes to a walker to a wheelchair.  The first six months after my diagnosis, I was very withdrawn, spending most of my time listening to music and playing cards on the internet.  Then, however, I started writing music, using computer programs including Finale and GarageBand on my Macintosh.  My musical compositions can be heard at http://www.acenoface.com/.  Since I can’t sing because of my condition, I have collaborated with musicians in Canada, Australia, Italy and all over the United States, who sing the lyrics I write for my songs.  I socialize with people from my synagogue, have become  the webmaster for my congregation (Shaarey Zedek), and have cooking parties with members of the congregation and other friends, where I act as executive chef, telling my sous chefs what to do.  I recently also became the sixth member of the synagogue’s “Yad Squad” – a special group of members who have read 100 lines from the Bible in the original Hebrew.

How has ALS brought new significance to your life: Every day, I wake up and think to myself, “What can I do today to leave some kind of creative expression, be it part of my humor website (porkrind.com), or a new song, or a delicious dinner with family and friends?”

 
 
 
 
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