Helen – Interview 07
Helen has had simple and complex partial seizures for most of her life but was diagnosed only 14 months before the interview. She is on lamotrigine and her seizures are reasonably well controlled.
Helen is 23 and works as a full-time broadcast assistant. She has had simple and complex partial seizures for most of her life but only got the diagnosis 14 months before the interview. Her first memories of seizures are from when she was a teenager but Helen said she didn’t tell anybody about her seizures for years as she had no idea what was happening and she was afraid people thinking she was ‘going a bit crazy’.
The diagnosis was a relief in the end and Helen says she feels much happier about herself now that she knows what was wrong all these years. However, Helen says it is difficult to accept being classified as disabled and dealing with people’s misconceptions and lack of knowledge of epilepsy. She says she still has a lot of questions about her epilepsy and that it still will take a long time for her to come to terms with having it. At the moment Helen is on lamotrigine and her seizures are reasonably well controlled.
Helen has also suffered from depression and raises the issue of being on both anti-depressive medication and AED at the same time. She said that having experienced seizures for a long time, and not knowing what they were, made her a very quiet and introverted child, and ‘write bad poetry’. Since, she has found the National Society for Epilepsy webforum extremely supportive and full of ‘amazing people’ answering her questions and never judging her.
She says it is tricky to know how to deal with mentioning epilepsy in job applications. In job interviews, she always emphasises how she has learnt to plan things carefully and become very organised and in this way turn her epilepsy into a positive thing!