Kirsty – Interview 01
Kirsty was diagnosed with epilepsy 10 months before the interview. She is currently on lamotrigine 200mg daily but her tonic-clonic seizures are not controlled at the moment.
Kirsty is 20 and works as a full-time hairdresser. She was diagnosed with epilepsy about 10 months before the interview. She had her first seizure while on holiday on Tenerife. The second one she had when she was back home and was then diagnosed. She has been on the same medication since, lamotrigine 200 mg per day. The seizures are currently not controlled and happen randomly. The cause of her epilepsy is not known. Kirsty finds the side effects of the medication frustrating, such as bad memory loss, lack of balance and feeling over-emotional.
When she got the diagnosis, Kirsty says she felt low and worried if she could still do the things she enjoyed. The main thing that affected her was not being able to drive her moped anymore – she felt she’d lost her freedom and independence. Now she says epilepsy doesn’t affect her life much, she works full-time, goes on holidays and can have a drink. Kirsty says that if it wasn’t for all the support from her boyfriend she would still sit in the house mopin. She can talk with her boyfriend about everything to do with epilepsy which has brought them closer together. Kirsty also feels safer when her boyfriend is around if she has a seizure in public. Kirsty says the Epilepsy Action’s webforum is a good place to share experiences of epilepsy with other young people and also to have a laugh.
Kirsty doesn’t have worries about epilepsy in the future because she deals with things as and when they come but she would like more information about the type of epilepsy she has. One major negative aspect is not being able to drive her moped. She is a very independent person and not being able to go for a drive whenever she wants frustrates her a lot. Epilepsy has made her more considerate of life, she says.