Pittsburgh Area Brain Injury Alliance

People Helping People Since 1981

Pittsburgh Area Peer Support Meeting Held on The First Tuesday of Each Month

Newsletter Sign-up  Contact Us  Newsletter Archives

 

Home
Up

Newsletter Sign-up

Support The I AM Foundation's Free Books and Music
Free Books & Music

Click here to join Brainstormers101
Click to join Brainstormers101

Free PowerPoint 2003 Viewer

Free Adobe Acrobat Reader
 

The EzineXchange - Your Source For Free Newsletters
       

Newsletter Archive for January 22, 2004

Sign up For Our Newsletter Here

Support Lines     Volume 2, Number 2 January 22, 2004

Thu, 22 Jan 2004 19:42:21 -0500

Beyond Survivor-Barrier Free PABIA-NEWS Header Picture

Support Lines     Volume 2, Number 2      January 22, 2004

Visit us on the Web at http://www.pabia.org


"The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent full of doubt." -Bertrand Russell

 

Did someone forward you this newsletter? Would you like to subscribe? 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

 


"Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored." -Aldous Huxley

 

In This Edition

  • PABIA-NEWS Subscriber Policy
  • Editor's Note
  • Western PA BIM / HS Recreational Bowling League
  • Free Prescription Drugs
  • PABIA Meeting Briefs
  • Cognitive Dissonance IV -by John Pistorius
  • PABIA-NEWS Talk Back!
  • Step Off The Curb by Neil Eskelin
  • Pittsburgh Area Brain Injury Alliance Meeting Notices
  • Thank You!
  • Subscribe/Unsubscribe instructions
  • Copyright notice

"We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit." -Aristotle

 
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.
 

The best way to cheer yourself up is to try to cheer somebody else up."
-Mark Twain

 
Editor's Note
Hello Folks,
 
Much is happening in the peer support movement in and around Pittsburgh. The PABIA Support Group Development Committee has changed its name to "Brain Trust" and continues to help people interested in creating new groups.
 
A New Focus group forming in Pittsburgh to address 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 are encouraged to attend.

This peer directed, professionally facilitated meeting is being formed as a collaborative endeavor between members of the Pittsburgh Area Brain Injury Alliance Support Group Development Committee 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, graduate student 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 with Ms. Ragano directing the new support group effort.

This Focus Group is scheduled to begin meeting bi-monthly in February 2004.

We have tools available to people interested in developing a peer support group or focus group meeting. Members of the PABIA Support Group Development Committee provide hands on assistance, email newsletter notification, aid in generating Meeting Notice Posters, Brochures, Press Releases and much more.

Anyone interested in attending this meeting can contact John Pistorius at jp@pabia.org or call 412.481.5482. If interested in helping to create or facilitate new peer support groups, please click here to contact the Support Group Development Committee. 

 
John Pistorius

I care not what your education is, elaborate or nothing, what your mental calibre is, great or small, that man who concentrates all his energies of body, mind and soul in one direction is a tremendous man. -De Witt Talmage

 
Western PA BIM / HS Recreational Bowling League
Where: Fun Fest Entertainment Center, 2525 Freeport Road, Pittsburgh, PA  15238
 
WHEN:   Monday Jan 26th,  Feb 23rd, March 22nd and April 19th.
 
COST:    $7per 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 @ Brain Injury Management, 412-531-0343.

 


"Come to the edge He said. They said: We are afraid. Come to the edge He said. They came. He pushed them, and they flew..." -Guillaume Apollinaire

Free Prescription Drugs
Print this and save for future reference

You can call the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America at 1-800-PMA-INFO. They will send you a list of all the Pharmaceutical companies that run free prescription drug programs. You can also visit them on the web at http://www.helpingpatients.org/.

Other Web sites that provide information about government-supported and private patient assistance programs:

Many companies have no income guidelines. You only need to tell them that you are having difficulty paying for your prescription drug. Contact the manufacturer of the drug, tell them your circumstances, and ask them about the requirements. Usually, you have to take a form to your doctor to sign and within two to three weeks after you send in your form, you get the drugs sent to your doctor for free.


"A dwarf standing on the shoulders of a giant may see farther than a giant himself." -Robert Burton


 
PABIA MEETING BRIEFS
Monroeville and Indiana Twp.
 
The Monroeville Area meeting was held January 8, 2004 in the Parlor of the Cross Roads Presbyterian Church, 2310 Haymaker Road, Monroeville, Pa. Seventeen person's attended. The main topic of discussion was related to public school officials lack of awareness of Brain Injury and related issues.
 
The Indiana Twp. meeting was held January 13, 2004 in the McLaughlin Education Center of HealthSouth, Harmarville. Sixteen people attended. After introductions, participants discussed, COMMCARE Waiver experiences, CAT Fund concerns, and a scheduled Bowling event.
 

"It is no exaggeration to say that every human being is hypnotized to some extent, either by ideas he has uncritically accepted from others, or ideas he has repeated to himself or convinced himself are true." -Dr. Maxwell Maltz

Cognitive Dissonance IV

Digging in, Planting, Fertilizing and Watering
-by John Pistorius
 
A Theory of Cognitive Dissonance was first introduced in 1957 by Leon Festinger. His theory was that human behavior is directed by a tendency to avoid dissonance (inconsistency) and to achieve consonance (consistency) in the order of cognitive experience.

Previously, I’ve explained and described how an individual reaches a state of Cognitive Dissonance when they have an imbalance between an attitude, emotion, belief or value, or even a mixture of these. In this part of the series, I’ll tie in issues related to Brain Injury and disability to help readers learn to deliberately overcome dissonance.

Sources of Dissonance can include new information that differs from our accepted position, uncontrollable circumstances, logical inconsistency, inclusion of a specific attitude within a more general attitude, cultural mores, and inconsistency with past experiences.

It is the avoidance of pain that drives the individual to seek consistency by eliminating contradictions. One way to reduce Cognitive Dissonance involves distorting the truth, which can cause wrong decisions. The drive to regain cognitive consistency or consonance among beliefs, ideas and attitudes motivates us to do whatever we find is easiest to eliminate or reduce inconsistency in our mind. We may not necessarily seek truth, only consistency. Festinger studied a group of people who were deluded into believing that a space ship was going to be picking them up on a certain date to save them from a flood. When it did not happen, what do you think they did? The leader of these people received another ‘divine’ message: the world was saved through their faith. This led the believers to become more faithful than ever. Given the failure of a precise prophecy, we might expect the opposite, that is, to abandon the beliefs produced by the earlier prediction. However, Cognitive Dissonance Theory says otherwise. It was too painful for these people to admit that they were mistaken. They had invested far to much in their belief.

People experience Cognitive Dissonance whenever traumatic events occur. For example, many people sustain Brain Injury every year. Some are injured severely and their abilities are reduced significantly. Many face serious physical and cognitive impairments. Others are mildly or moderately injured and left with varying degrees of ability. Substantial differences exist among this diverse population. Some receive medical and habilitation services. Others do not. Both sets and subsets of people continue to live after their injuries. Survivors experience Cognitive Dissonance when their lives are altered by deficits and disability which do not fit into their self-perception. Oftentimes, individuals describe a ‘loss’ of a sense of themselves and family members describe their loved one as "a different person" post injury.

Learning About Brain Injury and Cognitive Dissonance

Medical schools teach the currently known consequences of brain injury. They teach symptom-based strategies of ‘fixing’ whatever is 'broken.' Hospitals and rehabilitation companies are staffed with people who understand many facets of brain injury, cognitive impairments and disability. They meet and treat a percentage of the population of people who survive Brain Injury. However, they never get to meet a full representative selection of those who survive because of the vast number of people who never come through their doors. Understandably, this limits their comprehension and knowledge base of the full scope of Brain Injury Survivors. Nevertheless, habilitation focuses on overcoming whatever is perceived to be ‘wrong’ with the individual instead of working within the person’s abilities. And that is one very difficult nut to crack among the funding sources. Too much dissonance occurs to accept that we would better the outcomes of people by assisting them in developing their abilities instead of focusing on whatever doesn’t work the way it once did.

To many a person who works in the trauma center, most of the people who sustain brain injuries fit into a category of moderate to severe. People who meet survivors in a rehab setting might categorize most or all of those individuals into certain classifications of disability and impairment. Their professional experience ‘teaches’ medical company employees to believe that ‘all’ people who survive Brain Injury are similar or the same.

Now, let us look at another societal influence. Our current mass media projects a certain perception of Brain Injury, cognitive impairment and physical disabilities. Society has become ‘conditioned’ to believe certain things about ‘all’ people who sustain Brain Injury. These beliefs can limit the general public from fully understanding the issues, concerns and implications of Brain Injury. And they set the boundaries within which most people operate in relation to their thoughts regarding individuals who sustain Brain Injury. The general public’s thought garden is bound like a narrowly defined precinct within which they only permit certain ideas to grow and flourish. This is because they are restricted in their consumption (water and fertilizer) of accurate, relevant information. Everyone’s understanding is limited to varying degrees.

Perceived Differences Cause Dissonance

Humans are uniquely wired to perceive differences. Yet with three billion letters in the DNA map, only one in 12,000 is different from others. That makes us 99.9 % the same, regardless of abilities and surface appearance. Some people who survive Brain Injury become different-looking because of their physical impairments. Armed with societal or media-based information or medical model-based education, our encounters with people who appear to be functionally different from us can lead us to believe or feel that we are superior to them. This is because of conditioning. We have preconceived attitudes and judgments about what constitutes ‘normalcy’ in appearance and function.

The people who survive Brain Injury that exhibit visible change in physicality, behavior, thought processing and emotions post injury, do not fit into our notions of ‘normal.’ Therefore we might think differently of them or treat them differently. We might even feel uncomfortable in their presence. That discomfort would be due to the disharmony that exists between what we see and our preconceived ideas, judgments and opinions. And it could be based upon our fear of Brain Injury. The problem is that we would be basing our superiority judgment on the status of functional and appearance characteristics, not on any valid measurement of whom, in fact the individual is. Most would agree that this is like racism.

If someone does not look different from us, we might not know that they have sustained a brain injury. Therefore, unless they tell us, we might not treat them any differently. Would you agree? I know this to be true from within my personal experiences. In fact, I’ve spent many years testing this idea as I interact with others. I’ve met numerous people who ‘pass’ as non injured. Many blacks ‘passed’ as white after the end of slavery too.

If we learn that a person survived Brain Injury, Cognitive Dissonance occurs because they appear to be ‘normal’, as per our judgment, yet do not fit into our notions of people who survive Brain Injury. It is at this point that we must invest energy into resolving the conflict between our belief in one sense about ‘normalcy’ and what we believe in another sense about Brain Injury and cognitive impairment. Often, people rationalize away the dissonance.

It has also been my experience that many people invoke their ideas of superiority over the individual who admits to having survived Brain Injury once they face the Cognitive Dissonance caused by the inconsistency between their ideas and the reality. The discomfort felt at a discrepancy between what we already know or believe about Brain Injury, and new information or interpretation is Cognitive Dissonance. It becomes necessary therefore to accommodate new ideas to eliminate the dissonance or to dismiss the new information, even if uprooting the new information is illogical.

The strength of the dissonance is affected by two factors: the number of dissonant beliefs, and the importance attached to each belief.

Ways to Eliminate Dissonance

Choose to:

  • reduce (prune or cut down) the importance of the incompatible beliefs, or
  • add (plant, water and fertilize) more agreeable beliefs that outweigh the dissonant ideas, attitudes and beliefs, or
  • mutate the dissonant beliefs, ideas or information so that they are no longer inconsistent with those which you hold dear.

Often, rationalizing becomes the shovel to dig Cognitive Dissonance out of our thought garden. Individuals experiencing dissonance will often focus on facts, logic, or experience which reinforces their existing world view in order to resolve dissonance. In most instances, the (new) offending inconsistent evidence is dismissed (uprooted) totally as a result of this narrow focus on existing compatible beliefs, judgments, ideas etc. The individual seeks out semi-logical conclusions using their current ‘garden’ of thought material and newly created consistent ideas in order to find a way to invalidate the inconsistent evidence. Whenever someone is faced with learning something which contradicts what they already think they know, particularly if they are committed to that prior knowledge, they are likely to resist the new learning.

Dissonance often leads to:

  • misconception or misinterpretation of the fresh information,
  • rejection or refutation of the new information,
  • seeking support from those who agree with your convictions,
  • and attempting to persuade others to accept your belief.

Racism is a prime example. So is discrimination against people with disabilities.

Converting people from one set of beliefs to another about Brain Injury and those who survive Brain Injury has been one of my most difficult challenges. I’ve faced it in my personal life, in society and among the people who have been formally taught within the medical community. As difficult as the struggle has been, my family has been easiest to convert.

Belief verification is easy when we surround ourselves with like-minded people. Ralph Waldo Emerson said, "People only see what they are prepared to see." When we become committed to an important view that is specific enough to be considered unmistakable, we resist learning new information that confronts our accepted position. However, it can become easier to plant the new information and fertilize it with evidence to support rooting and growth into our thought garden when we are isolated from the group. Unfortunately, barring any unforeseen catastrophic event, we are rarely if ever isolated from our sphere of influence.

We avoid information that is likely to increase dissonance. We become comfortable traveling the same path to familiar destinations like to work, a favorite restaurant or grocery store to protect ourselves from the possibility of dissonance. To reduce our chance of experiencing dissonance, we choose reading material, television programs and movies that are consistent with our existing beliefs. Likewise, we surround ourselves with people that we believe are similar to us and we avoid others who we perceive to be different from us. This is especially true regarding narrowly focused, like-minded people. The people we surround ourselves with become our ‘peers’ who buffer us from ideas that could cause discomfort. In that sense, the process of making friends is an example of selecting our own information to support our beliefs. We subscribe to many systems of propaganda in our lives that shield us from dissonance.

Groups and Consonance

We join or form the following types of groups and organizations to increase consistency in our cognitions: cliques, fraternities, societies, clubs, leagues, associations, gangs, confederations, guilds, fellowships, teams, crews, support groups and committees.

Some of the above are formed by people having a common interest, activity or purpose. Others form on occasion by chance. Think about the set of friends you surround yourself with. What kind of people do you permit within your circle? What kind of ‘crowd’ do you ‘run’ with? Reflect upon the groups you have belonged to or still do. What kind of dissonance producing ideas motivate people to join. Why did you join the frat? Why become a member of the Elks, Moose or Eagles? Why do children join gangs? How do cliques form? Each of these illustrates the avoidance of dissonance in different ways and degrees.

Dissonance theory applies to all situations involving attitude formation and change. It is especially relevant to decision-making and problem-solving. The generation of dissonance can be a major feature of teaching and learning. This is simply because dissonance can be used as a kind of intellectual wedge between learners' current beliefs and "reality." What kind of dissonance producing ideas motivate people to become educated? Peer pressure? Familial pressure? Fear of poverty? Intellectual superiority? Societal class beliefs? Desire to become ‘someone’ and to make ‘something’ of their life? Or a selfless desire to better the planet?

If our learning has been expensive, difficult, uncomfortable, or even humiliating enough, we are not likely to admit that their knowledge or understanding is in error or not valuable. To do so would cause additional, sometimes unbearable dissonance. Pain and anguish that tests our resiliency and character can be an effective (even false) way of conferring value on any experience, including educational experience. People committed to a narrow focus find it most difficult to assimilate new information because it can be interpreted as devaluing their acquired educational experience.

Two ideas can be found to be true in relationship to difficult and expensive real life experiences or education courses:

  • participants are more likely to reinforce their value of it and to view it favorably regardless of its real quality, and
  • the less likely they will be to permit the seeds of different or conflicting beliefs and ideas to be planted in their thought garden.
A person is limited by their confidence that complex details and difficult to understand subjects are beyond the understanding of an average mind. Nevertheless, this has been exploited for years to persuade us to give our power away to those ‘who know best’.
 
Much has been learned about what determines attitudes and beliefs, the internalization of values, the consequences of decisions, and the effects of disagreement among persons. The pressure to reduce dissonance increases in proportion to the intensity of the dissonance. Resistance to change depends on the extent of pain or loss that must be endured and the satisfaction obtained from holding onto one’s existing beliefs and attitudes.
 
Next time: Real Attitude Changing Circumstances; specific strategies for overcoming dissonance.
 

He that reads and grows no wiser seldom suspects his own deficiency, but complains of hard words and obscure sentences, and asks why books are written which cannot be understood. - Samuel Johnson

 
PABIA-NEWS Talk Back !
Animated Email Us graphic
 
 
It's so good to speak to someone who on the one hand is "uninvolved" and on the other hand is obviously committed to using this brilliant tool to make people feel good and air their views. -Sheila Belcher
 
In just two meetings PABIA has helped my spirits more than anything or anybody since my accident. Your organization is a gift from God. -Janey Mosier
 

"I wish they would only take me as I am." -Vincent Van Gogh

 
STEP OFF THE CURB
Neil Eskelin
 
Recently, two women knocked on our door and handed me a little pamphlet with the title, "Millions Now Living Will Never Die." I smiled and commented, "I think you should change the headline."
 
"What do you mean?" one responded. I replied, "It should say, 'Millions now living are already dead!'"

I was serious. I meet people every day who are lifeless. There is no sparkle in their eye and no grip in their handshake. For all practical purposes, they have given up.

Instead of living, millions of people watch life pass by. I doubt I will ever be able to comprehend why someone would tune to a fishing show on a beautiful summer day instead of
heading for the nearest lake. If the Good Book were being written today, there would probably be a verse that reads: "Without a television the people perish."

The Greek philosopher Hercalitus observed long ago, "You cannot step twice into the same river, for other waters are continually flowing in." The universe is changing. It's alive - just as we must be.
 
Don't allow yourself to become a spectator in the parade of life. Step off the curb and join the procession.

(source:  >^,,^<  "InsPURRational Mews" inspurrations@topica.com)
 

We cannot change anything until we accept it. Condemnation does not liberate, it oppresses." -C. G. Jung, Psychological Reflections

 
Pittsburgh Area Brain Injury Alliance
Upcoming Local Meeting Notices
 
Next Pittsburgh Area meeting date:  Tuesday, February 3, 2004
 
Ed Crinnion 1/8/04TIME:  7:00 P.M.
TOPIC: Mend The Mind, Mind The Body, Meet the Soul, with Dr. Frances Bruce Marion.
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 Monroeville Area meeting date:  Thursday, February 5, 2004
 
Paul DamonTIME:  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.
 
 

The next Indiana Twp. meeting date: Tuesday, February 9, 2004

 
Meeting ParticipantsTime: 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.
 

"Throughout history, it has been the inaction of those who could have acted; the indifference of those who should have known better; the silence of the voice of justice when it mattered most; that has made it possible for evil to triumph." -Haile Selassie

 
Thank You!
 
Realty Counseling Co., Inc. LogoThank you Jim Sproat and Realty Counseling Co., Inc. 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 reach him at Realty Counseling Co., Inc., 1012 East Carson Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15203,  by telephone at 412.381.1166 or visit the Realty Counseling Co. website at http://www.realtycounseling.com. Realty Counseling Co., Inc. is a full service real estate company, serving the Pittsburgh area for more than twenty-five years.

Thank You Dr. Mason Scott for the correction to the COMMCARE waiver article that appeared in the last edition of PABIA-NEWS, Support Lines. The number of recipients HAS NOT been determined for next year. Anyone interested in applying for this Waiver should do so immediately by contacting Nichelle Smith at TRCIL by calling (412) 371-7700, ext. 145. Ms. Smith will ask for some basic information and then have an enrollment specialist contact you to schedule a meeting.
 

An Ongoing Thank You to Ed Crinnion for: his untiring efforts, his videotaping of meetings to give us a 'memory,' his continued financial support of this organization and his sponsoring of our website. Ed is one of a kind-to be sure!
 

"Better keep yourself clean and bright; you are the window through which you must see the world." -George Bernard Shaw
 
Subscribe or Unsubscribe From The Pittsburgh Area Brain Injury Alliance Electronic News List

 
* TO JOIN THE LIST *

Send a blank email to:  PABIA-NEWS-SUBSCRIBE-REQUEST@LISTSERV.TBINET.ORG (your Subject: line may say JOIN)
 
  * TO BE REMOVED  *

Please remember you may remove yourself from this list (unsubscribe) at any time by sending a blank email to PABIA-NEWS-SIGNOFF-REQUEST@LISTSERV.TBINET.ORG (your  Subject: line may say REMOVE)
 
You can also visit our http://www.pabia.org website and click the newsletter link that leads to the List Server page designed for  subscribe or unsubscribe requests.
 
If you know of anyone who would enjoy receiving this publication, please forward this message to them.
 

"Four hostile newspapers are more to be feared than a thousand bayonets."
-Napoleon, Maxims

 
Copyright notice
 
"PABIA-NEWS" may be copied and re-transmitted by electronic mail, and individual copies of a particular "PABIA-NEWS" may be printed, provided that such copying, re-transmission, printing, or other use is not for profit.

Any copying, re-transmission, distribution, printing, or other use of "PABIA-NEWS" must set forth the following credit line, in full, at the conclusion of the portion of "PABIA-NEWS" that is used:
 
Copyright © 2004 John Pistorius 
Reprinted with permission.
 
We may withdraw or modify this grant of permission at any time.

"When you get to the end of your rope, tie a knot and hang on." -Franklin D. Roosevelt

 
John Pistorius at a recent meeting of the Pittsburgh Area Brain Injury Alliance Peer Support Group.
 
 
 
till next time-Seek to be and remain Barrier-Free.
 
 
 
 

Strange as it may seem, no amount of learning can cure stupidity, and formal education positively fortifies it. -Stephen Vizinczey"

 
Date:   Thu, 22 Jan 2004 19:42:21 -0500
Reply-To:   John Pistorius <jp@PABIA.ORG>
From:   John Pistorius <jp@PABIA.ORG>
Subject:   Newsletter Correction
Content-Type:   multipart/related; type="multipart/alternative";

[multipart/alternative]

 


Thank you, Paul Damon, for pointing out the error in the January 22, 2004 PABIA-NEWS, Support Lines regarding the next Monroeville Area Peer Support Group meeting date. -John Pistorius

 

The following is accurate:

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.

*********************************************** The PABIA-NEWS mailing list is sponsored by L-Soft international, Inc and powered by L-Soft's renowned LISTSERV(R) list management software. For more information, go to: http://www.lsoft.com/LISTSERV-powered.html