Will – Interview 26
Will was diagnosed with epilepsy at the age of 14. He is currently on Tegretol Retard (carbamazepine) and Keppra (levetiracetam) and has not had a seizure for four years.
Will is 24 and studies product design. He had first seizure at the age of 14 on a London bus. A week later he had another seizure, was taken to see a neurologist who diagnosed Idiopathic Generalised Epilepsy. After his initial diagnosis his school stopped him playing rugby and he had to give up his GCSE design technology (DT) course because it involved using machinery which could be dangerous. The school nurse organised an Epilepsy awareness day and, over the following months, as Will was well, the school relaxed their ban on the rugby and the DT course. He was first prescribed Epilim (sodium valproate) but soon the seizures returned and he was switched to Tegretol Retard (carbamazepine). Despite this, Will and his family went off to ski for a week with no problems. Will was seizure-free for two years and thought everything was sorted. Then, out of the blue, he had another seizure. This was a shock to him and Will says that for a while it was really hard for him to accept his epilepsy and the setback. He says that he had to suck in my pride and get on with i.
It was a big deal for Will not being able to get his driving licence at 17 with his friends, especially because he had always been very passionate about cars and had a pile of Top Gear Subscription! Will says he is starting to treat life normall as he has been seizure-free for such a long time now. He feels very lucky that he is so well controlled by medication and also that he is not photosensitive. He describes muscle twitches that he used to get in his neck or on his finger. These twitches are classified as seizures and Will says they were sometimes followed by a tonic clonic seizure, especially at times when tired or stressed.
Because he is seizure-free, some of Will’s current friends don’t know he has epilepsy. Will lives at home with his parents and sister. He says his father tends to be overprotective which he finds quite frustrating. Will says his epilepsy has made him mature faster and after the relapse he had two years ago he has become more ‘wary’. He has a passion for design and Art and he says his epilepsy doesn’t need to affect his work plans.