Bob Barnett

Patient

231-7845



May 1, 2000

Dr. William F. Bryce, MDF

Fax: 323-0454



Dear Dr. Bryce,



I am down to two days supply of the medication you prescribed for keeping me from falling asleep during the day. As a rule my nodding off has become much less, especially if I get more than six hours of sleep at night. On the weekends, I try not to take it and find that I am back into the three to five 15 minute "snap" naps, suddenly sleepy with less than a minute to find a place to sleep.



Because the medication has helped me stay awake and focus more on my work as well as the safety of not falling asleep while driving, I would like another prescription. Could you kindly do so and have an associate call me at 231-7845 so I can drop and pick it up. Can my wife, Cathy Spence, also a patient of yours, pick up my prescription?



Thanks





Bob Barnett











Bob Barnett

Patient

231-7845



May 29, 2000



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177

Fax: 323-0454



Dear Dr. Bryce,



Time flies. Seems like yesterday-May 1-that I requested a prescription refill of the stay awake medication-methyphenidate. Could you prepare one so I or my wife can pick it up?



Health status is better than it has been for a good while. Sleeping better. No esophageal regurgitation. Cough is 90% diminished. Still need to come in and get the PSA test. Have lost 20 pounds in the last two months 217-196, goal is another 20 pounds-196 lbs > 177 lbs. Good for 5'10" 50 year old.



If you could have an assistant call me at 231-7845, I would appreciate it.



Thank you,







Bob Barnett

Bob Barnett

Patient

231-7845



May 29, 2000



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177

Fax: 323-0454



Dear Dr. Bryce,



Time flies. Seems like yesterday-May 1-that I requested a prescription refill of the stay awake medication-methyphenidate. Could you prepare one so I or my wife can pick it up?



Health status is better than it has been for a good while. Sleeping better. No esophageal regurgitation. Cough is 90% diminished. Still need to come in and get the PSA test. Have lost 20 pounds in the last two months 217-196, goal is another 20 pounds-196 lbs > 177 lbs. Good for 5'10" 50 year old.



If you could have an assistant call me at 231-7845, I would appreciate it.



Thank you,







Bob Barnett





Bob Barnett

Patient

231-7845



June 30, 2000



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177

Fax: 323-0454

Dear Dr. Bryce,



Time flies ... again. Seems like yesterday-May 29-that I requested a prescription refill of the stay awake medication-methyphenidate. Could you prepare one for pick up as well as the sleep medication?



Health status remains good. When I take the sleep medicine, I get continual sleep even if it only last 5 or 6 hours. Better than waking up every couple of hours. The esophageal regurgitation is a thing of the past-don't remember the last time. Cough is once or twice a week, not several times a day. Weigh is same-have spent half of last month out of town on business to launch an internet website. I can say that if I succeed in the final stages of this business development, it was the better sleep and awakeness that made it less of struggle as well as sooner. Thank you.



If you could have an assistant call me at 231-7845, I would appreciate it.



Thank you,







Bob Barnett



Bob Barnett

Patient

231-7845



August 2, 2000



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177

Fax: 323-0454

Dear Dr. Bryce,



Thanks for authorizing a refill of prescription for methyphenidate on June 30. Could you prepare one for me to pick up from an assistant?



Health remains good. Means more and more what the old folk said when they say each day becomes more of a blessing as you grow older. Seems like a lottery that more and more people I know are winning that none want to win but all must play, namely, going to funerals as a visitor or the visited.



I can't think of funerals without thinking about what Alice Roosevelt Longsworth said about her father, Teddy, the President: At weddings he acted like he was the bride and at funerals he acted like he was the corpse. Good humor is one prescription for good health.



Thanks for helping me remain in both, see you for a physical before the end of the year. Still need the PSA test. Hope you read about me in the newspaper and my new business in the next 30 days ... if all goes well.



If you could have an assistant call me at 231-7845, I would appreciate it.



Thank you,







Bob Barnett

Bob Barnett

Patient

612-483-5110



October 18, 2000



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177

Fax: 323-0454

Dear Dr. Bryce,



My wife picked up a prescription for the methylphenidate which she posted to me using a mall parcel service. Unfortunately, it did not arrive. In contacting the service (Parcel Plus, Debbie@804-739-0502), we were told that despite paying $10 for USPS Priority Mail, that letters were just dropped in regular mail boxes. I have filed a complaint with the USPS for this firm advertising Priority Mail but simply using 1st Class.



My problem is that with the previous prescription gone and no mail, I realize how sleepy I get during the day. Every 75 to 90 minutes I drop off. After this business is launched, I think I need to get a series of tests to figure out what is happening.



I have temporarily relocated to Minneapolis to launch my marketing/research webservice that is modeled after the annual spelling bee, only faster and cheaper. People can spell out problem-solutions within cyber classrooms.



I'm hoping that another prescription can be written which my wife can FedEx with tracking numbers. Please call me at 612-483-5110 or my wife at 804-347-3962 (cell) or 804-231-7845 (home). Should the other prescription arrive, I will either not fill the new one, or, if after, filling, be able to go two months without a refill request.



Thanks,



Bob Barnett





Debbie, 804-739-0502,

Manager

UPS-

Priority United States



Phil Seyfried

"Every customer is told this"



Parcel Plus



Nancy







Bob Barnett

Patient

612-483-5110



November 6, 2000



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177

Fax: 323-0454

Dear Dr. Bryce,



My ambien sleep prescription refill has run out. Could you kindly have your assistant call the pharmacist to renew it. I do find that I get a more restful, refreshing sleep with the ambien. Wish it didn't cost so much, but that's a complaint the presidential candidates are both "promising" to address. I know we will hear the same promises in four years when the campaign speeches again come out of the closets.



Warmest regards and thanks,





Bob Barnett





Bob Barnett

Patient





December 6, 2000



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177

Fax: 323-0454

Dear Dr. Bryce,



My Ambien sleep prescription refill has run out. Could you kindly have your assistant call the pharmacist to renew it at Walgreens Westover Hills, 230-6335.



In my last letter I referenced the Presidential candidates promising to address the cost of medication. I bet they haven't been sleeping better since the election!



Best wishes for the holidays!





Bob Barnett



804-231-7845





December 13, 2000



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177

Fax: 323-0454

Dear Dr. Bryce,



I probably should have taken care of this when I faxed you last week for the ambien refill. My methyphenidate is down to seven pills. Could you write a prescription for pickup?



Won't comment on the Presidential circus which curiously became more clouded with each curve.



Barring my a setback, will launch my next Tuesday. If successful, I'm sure you'll have some questions for me when I schedule a physical after the first of the year. Keywords to remember: Timism, Lifehours, Decapitalism and On-Line Spelling Bees.



Again, best wishes for the holidays!





Bob Barnett



804-231-7845



January 8, 2001



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177

Fax: 323-0454

Dear Dr. Bryce,



Well, a New Year and a new request for both the methyphenidate and the ambien. Should have synchronized them a long time ago.



Well, the political comment of the month is: The economy is about to bushwack President Bush with a recession. Is it the case, like father, like son? I hope I am wrong, but I think NASDAQ will be under 2000 by inaugural day. Alan Greenspan gave it his best shot last week but Main Street said it isn't the interest rates, it the production and profit rates.



My launch has been delayed. Had beta testers proving out the process until hackers burned up my internet router. I must have something good for people to hack my site as they do. But I am running out of time and money.





Bob Barnett



804-231-7845



February 14, 2001



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177

Fax: 323-0454

Dear Dr. Bryce,



Well, a new President and new tax changes means new headaches for the average business. I was wrong about the NASDAQ dropping below 2000 by inauguration day. I am concerned about the markets shrugging off Alan Greenspan's actions.



My business launch keeps being setback by hackers. Have had another internet router burned up by hackers. Given the nature of the hacks, I know I have something. My software will do to human decision-making what computers did to bookkeeping and accounting. Currently, computers just generate more quantities of information while my software automatically qualifies information with the top decision-maker receiving the seven best pieces of information.



Unfortunately, I don't have the money for the internet security pitbulls to chase down the hackers. So, I am packaging the concept to sell it to a national concern that already has the security pitbulls. Have had two offers but I would end up in six months with mucho dollars and a dead dream.



Once again, if you could write prescriptions for the methylphenidate and ambien, I would appreciate it. Having flown to another city without my bottles, I could tell the difference in sleeping soundly for five to seven hours and waking up every couple of hours as well as not nodding off several times during the day.



Bob Barnett



804-231-7845





March 21, 2001



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177

Fax: 323-0454

Dear Dr. Bryce,



I am in town for a few days and would like to accomplish two things. My prescriptions are at their end again. I would like to come by Friday (March 23) to pick up the prescription. Also, if I could have some routine blood tests to see if anything is happening, that would be great if your nursing staff could squeeze me in. Nothing seems to be wrong, just check the oil under hood to see if any contaminants have got into the vascular coolants.



Well, the NASDAQ finally did what I thought it would do by Inauguration Day, drop below 2000. I had been saying that since Labor Day. And, yesterday, proved what I expressed in my last letter: I am concerned about the markets shrugging off Alan Greenspan's actions. Yesterday at 2pm, the markets began a free fall after the Fed Chairman announcement. (I gave a speech once about how some people fall over dead when Greenspan speaks ... and other people's keel over when he doesn't speak. His response: Different strokes for different folks.)



On the public radar scope I am a non-entity. However, I will venture two forecasts: The NASDAQ will see 1000 before 3000 and the DOW will be under 6000 before 12000. Carter inflation is coming back. One day I will share with you my diagnosis/prognosis tool which is the core of the internet business I am trying to launch, Timism (time +ism).



More specifically, if you have any energy depended stocks I would sell them. This energy crisis is not a boom for energy companies. Energy is about to be regulated like the utility companies that depend on energy companies, e.g., the government ordering an energy company to repay $50MM. As you probably know now, the best place for excess liquidity at this time is bonds ... at least you conserve your principle. For the long-term, it's the old headache of real estate ownership.



Bob Barnett

804-231-7845



May 21, 2001



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177

Fax: 323-0454

Dear Dr. Bryce,



Time for another prescription of ambian and methyphenidate. If you could have Partrice phone the ambien and put a script at the desk for the pickup of the methylphenidate, it would be greatly appreciated.



No great economic insights except watching another bubble being built in tech stocks. Tech companies are diving and Greenspan keeps throwing a lifeline to no avail, for the money is no going into production but is a classic example of inflation: More money chasing the same goods, in this case, stocks. The problem is that there are no good ideas in which people can invest their good money. The problem is the symbols of our wealth are divorced from the substance of our inspiration and perspiration.



On the energy crises, Bush will keep backpedaling, for 75% of Americans think conservation, not production, is the answer. This percentage will rise when it is shown how all major droughts in the last seventy years (Dustbowl 1930's, Dustbowl 1950's, Africa 1967+, China 1998+, US Northwest 1998+, US Southeast 1999+, just to name a few) have been caused by major oilfields upwind from the droughts. In effect, the projected harm of global warming has been happening under the plumes of flared gases of oil field. Will be interesting to see how the Bush Administration reacts to this discovery when it is released in a few weeks.



Wish me luck, and thanks for keeping me awake when I need to be. I can tell a big difference between days I take and days I don't. Same with the nights. My mind does not stop racing if I don't take the Ambien. If I am sufficiently successful in my endeavors, I would be a spokesman for ambien just so others would know that insomnia does not have to be a lifelong curse. I have always been adversed to long-term elective medication but I'd rather have a shorter life with refreshing sleep than a life twice as long with insomnia. Sort of like, would you like to die at fifty a freeman or live a century in a prison? In the end, the quality of life is the quantity of quality minutes.



Thx again.



Bob Barnett

804-231-7845



June 22, 2001



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177, Fax: 323-0454

Dear Dr. Bryce,



Time for another prescription of ambian(10mg) and methyphenidate(20mg).



Before prognosticating on the economy, I'll reflect on last month's comments.

Our economy is not responding to cheaper money or lower taxes for a simple reason. The accumulated laws since the last recession has created a system like a bucket with rusty, growing holes. The thirsty man dips the bucket in the river for a drink but the water drains before it rises to the man's lip. Likewise with the interest rate and tax rate cuts. The tax cuts are bigger holes with the interest rate cuts increasing the water flow in the bucket, but not enough to cancel the outflow. Sadly, the Bush tax cuts are not going to prompt investment that solves the real problems that waste the water of human life: time. If I was God, I would send the lawyers to jail, the politicians to purgatory and the economists to hell.



If nothing goes wrong. I will be uploading and advertising my webservice next week. Timism.com. I will fax you when it is up.

Thx again.



Bob Barnett

804-233-7541 (new phone #)

July 23, 2001



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177, Fax: 323-0454

Dear Dr. Bryce,



Time for another prescription of ambian(10mg) and methyphenidate(20mg).



Time flies faster than I realized. I believed I was ready to launch last week when two things happened. When I ordered an additional data line to be turned on, I found some had wire-spliced my initial data line with it going into a room of computers of a business next door. Most interesting. And, last Thursday, a computer "worm" set to infect the White House computes (maybe you heard of it) richocheted out to inflect DSL routers. My router was down for two days.



The economy is in the doldrums with the G-8 leaders saying it is the fault of the others who is also responsible for reviving the global economy. Greenspan grows gloomier and now talks of an unprecedented sixth rate cut. More and cheaper money is not the answer. The tax cut will cause inflation in some items but at the cost of a disappearing budget surplus that was supposed to help social security. Politicians, spending the same money twice.



Hope to launch this week. Who knows what surprises will pop up. Will let you know so you can check it out. One day when it is a success, you can let me know what you thought of the on-going monologue and seemingly never launched web-service. I thought I would be launched in 60 days and it has become 335. I'm not a quitter.





Thx again.



Bob Barnett

804-233-7541 (new phone #)



P.S. Special thanks to Patrice for doing the paper work on this.





August 20, 2001



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177, Fax: 323-0454

Dear Dr. Bryce,



Each time I fax a request for a new monthly prescription, I feel confident that you will read about me in the headlines before you get another fax. But here I am requesting a refill of the ambian(10mg) and methyphenidate(20mg).



The delays are all understandable though I wish I could have done all this work at home rather than in a distant city. Often I feel like the spinster who keeps enhancing the wedding dress but having no time to date a beau.



Economically, gosh, I can't believe that the stock market stays up as well as it does. The only explanation is false hopes on top of 401(k)s that keep pouring money down the drain. This is the first time since the Depression that all the major economies are in recession. Did I tell you that I spend two to three hours a day reviewing major domestic and foreign papers?



I laugh when economists say that the robust Chinese economy will pull the world out of a global recession. If the Chinese economy is so gung-ho, why did both the Peoples Daily and China Daily headline how China's Premier wants to increase all public workers' paychecks to stimulate the economy?



As a physician, are you aware of the medical mess in China? Because doctors reuse needles, 60% of all Chinese are infected with Hepatitis B (yes, 60 percent, 900 million people!). Liver cancer is the number one cancer in China at a rate numerous times our rate. With this medical burden alone, how can China be viewed as a future economic contestant? But China has an HIV problem that I hope is not as bad as one person calculated. So far in 20 years, according to the U.N. WHO, 50+ million have contracted AIDS of which 30+ million have died. This is outside of China which has not allowed outsiders to do independent research inside of China. But the medical community in Africa has been long surprised by the HIV knowledge of Chinese doctors who show up in Africa. One researcher traveling through China as a "tourist" suggests that China alone might have 100 million HIV-infected persons in the last five to ten years, almost twice the numberb in the outside world. On top of doctors reusing needles, drug-dealers use the same needle hundreds of times and blood plasma companies pool the blood of donors before plasma extraction and re-injection. Some rural villages have 80% HIV infection rates. And, China has had a sexual revolution without condoms spurred, in part, by the internet. The "tourist" reported a strip of bordellos in "prostitute free" China that was on both sides of a road five miles long with some houses having 600 ladies. America is more threatened by Chinese biting us than bombing us. It's sad. (I wish I had read the above figures in a freshman's English composition exam rather than the WSJ, NYT, WashPost, FT, etc.)



Thx again.



Bob Barnett

804-233-7541 (new phone #)



September 17, 2001



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177, Fax: 323-0454

Dear Dr. Bryce,

At times like this I wish I had not quit pre-med for psychology and philosophy. Somehow I ended up in the dismal science (economics) and the dishonest science (politics). These are more than the times that try one's soul.



Two weeks before the World Trade Center pivotal point, I had posted on the wall at my local watering hole the following: By Dec 1, Nasdaq under 1500 and Dow in 7000's. I would revise my projections downward but it is too depressing. I keep hoping I am wrong but the dice keep coming up box cars and snake eyes. The actions of the Bush administration, Federal Reserve and Security and Exchange Commission may repeat the WTC terrorism as an economic collapse. Never has throwing money at a financial crisis solved the underlying economic problems--1870's, 1907, 1929. Like gasoline on a fire. The collapse occurs more precipitously to greater depths. They should have kept the markets closed for a few months. So what if some brokers had to find jobs as teachers' aides, medical assistants, police officers, or retirement helpers? To save these people's jobs, the Federal Reserve threw $380 billion into domestic and foreign banks to prop up the market. It's doomed to fail as the economic supports weakens and collapses like the skyscrapers in Manhattan.



Pivotal point. In the history of humanity, WWI was more devastating than WWII even though the latter had greater loss of life from war and genocide. By 1918, the face and soul of civilization had been lost. All the old institutions into which people placed their allegiance and faith were gone: monarchies, banks, churches, etc. WWII did not change people's existential foundations. The fallout from the WTC on all levels of life (politics, economics, military, insurance, banking, travel, safety, savings, retirement and self) will not reach bottom until these institutions are piles of debris like lower Manhattan. A dismal view even for economics.



I hope I am wrong in my assessments and projections. If I did not believe that my internet concept for better democracy and capitalism would be a new world of safe harbors for weary travelers in stormy seas, I would stop the effort. I had put my website up a few days before WTC with a growing number of hits as well as people stopping to comment on it. I hope to relaunch next week. I have to review certain positions in light of the WTC ramifications. In these times of growing problems, new problem-solvers must be careful of criticizing the old problem-solvers who are not solving the problems.



As you can tell, my mind does race across a broad spectrum. If ever I achieve any recognition, I am going to (as said before) be a spokesman for Ambien. Anyone who cannot sleep because of a restless mind needs to learn about it. On the nights I don't take it at 9 I remain awake thinking about these topics of the human dilemma. New paradigms come from individuals who focus their energies, and, I think my discovery of timism is the paradigm to which humanity can elevate itself from the basement of intellectual debris. History will be the judge.



When we meet again, you'll have to tell me your judgement of my monthly reviews. When I get the time, I'm going to review them, for I know they reflect a biographical slice of a journey that I never expected to last so long nor require so many personal sacrifices. But like a woman in labor, you don't get up until bundle is delivered intact.



Thanks again,



bob barnett



P.S. Could you have an assistant forward another prescription for the methylphendate. Even with it, I find myself falling asleep pretty much on the REM cycle during most of the day. I've correlated my cyclic sleepiness with working to tie the strings together on this project. The harder I work, the more I find myself dosing off every 75 to 90 minutes for a five to ten minute nap. When I lay down, I try not to think of anything. Best thing seems to be picking a number between 50,000 and 99,999 and counting backward! Works better than counting Mary's little lambs!





October 18, 2001



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177, Fax: 323-0454

Dear Dr. Bryce,

Well, I feel like the auto-mechanic who has prepared to fix any car that has bumped along an increasingly rougher road only to be confronted with the car that is driving off a cliff. Continuing the analogy, I find it shocking that the driver keeps telling the passenger that bumps are not bumps and the new direction will provide a smoother ride.



The U.S. has never gone into a war with consumers maxed out on credit cards and a shrinking economy. This is the cliff of which I analogized. The driver's mis-statements are many, but the most glaring was the unemployment figures. Biggest jump in unemployment claims in ten years, two to three times the number of the previous month ... but ... but the unemployment rate did not change. Finding this odd, I visited the Bureau of Labor Statistics only to find that the individual state listings for the previous month were missing. Jumping around some American newspapers in different states, I found individual state rates had gone up. Apparently, national economic math is different than state's economic math. In the end I concluded that the 199,000 unemployment figure was low, actually an economist's $1.99 special for bait and switch. The bait and switch has already started, for "corrections" to the previous month's figures have already begun. It is not good when a government does not trust its citizenry to tell the truth, for the falsehoods accumulate with the final costs being compounded by lack of honesty.



Am launching my site, hope to fax you next week to visit it. Maybe I can stop some other cars from going off the cliff.



Please do not think me unpatriotic, for my extended lonely stay in Minneapolis is a statement of my commitment to what America represents, the best hope for mankind (A. Lincoln.)

November 16, 2001



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177, Fax: 323-0454

Dear Dr. Bryce,



Well, the economy is doing better than I expected at this time which makes me happy to be wrong. I hope my happiness about being wrong in these matters continues.



On the other hand, the economy is being artificially stimulated by private and public activities that cannot last: Congress turning the surplus into a deficit using the tragedy of the World Trade Center as a cover for old fashion pork, and, automobile companies financing zero-interest car loans. Ford Motor Company is losing $800+ on each car because of this financing but must match GM. (I think GM figures this is one way to put Ford on the ropes, sort of like U.S. Grant figuring that the way to beat Robt. E. Lee was a slugfest with the Union having the greatest reserve of lives to lose before the South no longer had any lives to lose or to fight.) Low interest rates are great if they do not initiate later economic problems. Who's going to buy cars next year? Do we have Aesop's jackrabbit that is not going last?



A great question of interest to others and myself is the competing forces of deflation and inflation. Japan has been in a deflationary spiral for a decade with four recessions under its belt. It's effective -.5% bank interest rate means that one is paid to take out a loan. But Japanese businesses are hamstrung with old debts and over-capacity thus not needing more debt or loans. I have long said that the direction of America's economic future will follow a combination of Japan and Argentina, reflecting how our fiscal policy reflects one and the budgetary process reflects the other. We have too many people eating rather than baking cake.



My website launch is now scheduled for the first Monday after Thanksgiving. At the risk of using of a poor analogy, its like testing an airplane. You set the date only to find you have the wrong octane fuel. Back to the hanger. With new fuel, you start to taxi only to find controls sticky. Back to the hanger. One of these days my bird is going to fly.





Hope you are in good health and ready for Turkey Day. Could you please have an associate mail me a prescription for the methylphenidate(20mg) and ambien (10mg).



Thanks,



bob barnett

804--233-7541



December 18, 2001



Dr. William F. Bryce, MD

Ph: 323-0177, Fax: 323-0454

Dear Dr. Bryce,



Well, the webservice is up, paritally, Timism.com. I expect to initiate the marketing part next week. Wish me luck.



On more than one occasion, I have referenced "Oil Droughts" and the impact on energy companies. Currently, it is not directly linked from the home page but can be accessed at timism.com\OilDrought\Index.htm. I know I am not wrong on how all the major droughts of the last 70 years can be tied to upwind oil fields burning off the massive amounts of uncommercial natural gas.



I hope I am wrong about how quickly the climate is going to change. It does not look good with records being broke in heat and dryness. I know Richmond set a record for dry days. Here, not only was water restraints in place but the crops were two weeks from failing. Here, October was 26 degrees above normal. We have had a record number (~50) of days above average. Two weeks ago, a daily record was broken by nine degrees! My websegment, Oil Drought, lists these anomalies world wide. Half of the global temperature rise in the last century has occurred in the last ten years. I actually expect a nationwide crop failure in the next three to five years. This has already happened in a number of downwind drought areas: Dustbowl 1930s, Africa, China/Korea, Brazil, SouthEast US, and Northwest US. Most topical is the droughts in Central Asia from which the Hydra of terrorism grew to visited us on 911.



Now that my website is up, I can reference a few things to which you can visit for a weighted conclusion. Timism (time + ism)is a cohesive body of information based on a 30-year old conclusion that Einstein was partially wrong about time and relativity. My on-line resume shows a broad body of achievements from which I subjected the validity of timism. If I am not wrong, my place will notched with the salutation: Timism, the periodic table of existence. Like the chemical periodic table of elements (which is a sub-table of timism), timism organizes the levels of existence into a table based on the quantification/qualification of time within the entities of existence. Pretty heavy but very simple. So, I am either your nuttiest or luckiest patient.



Happy holidays and a happy new 365!



bob barnett

804--233-7541



P.S. Could you please have an associate mail me a prescription for the methylphenidate(20mg) and ambien (10mg).









Robert S. Barnett

3600 Anne St

Richmond, Virginia 23225



April 12, 2002





Attn: Tominika @ fax 804-323-0454



Please fax my medical records to



Dr. Joseph M. Gasik (ph.612-379-1119)

1229 2nd St. NE

Minneapoli, MN 55413

fax 612-379-4936



If you have any questions, please fax me at 612-337-3245. My phone is 612-414-0881.



Thanks,





Bob Barnett



cc: Dr. Gasik



Please





May 3, 2002



Blue Cross/Blue Shield Referral Service



cc: Greta

Dr. Kitty Earl

1229 2nd St.

NE Minneapolis, MN 55413

fax 612-379-4936



To whom it may concern:



My physician has requested that I undergo tests at sleep clinic. The question was raise by a Blue Cross/Blue Shield representative as to the history of the sleep disorder. The following describe events going back almost four decades:



  1. In the US Navy, I was cited for falling asleep on duty.
  2. In college I slept twice a day from 4 to 6:30, morning and afternoon.
  3. In college friends would not let me drive because I fall asleep with little warning.
  4. My wife of 25 years has received all the driving tickets because she does 90% of the driving because of my falling asleep.
  5. I have for years had problems falling asleep, tossing and turning.
  6. Employees, friends and peers can attest to my falling asleep on the job, at meetings and at meals.



My sleep disorder seems to be an ebb and flow cycle of about 90 minutes. I fall asleep for a few minutes and wake up, both during the day and at night.



Sincerely,





Robert S. Barnett

Wife's Name: Cathy J Spence. Group 615 75000 id 162425181