A HEALTHIER AWARENESS

A community board raising public awareness to health issues`

Epilepsy

One patient’s insight, to another`

The Power Of The Storm
For Brendon
For me, it was at the tender age of 13, almost 14. The disease for me,
certainly not so severe as for others, no. But I was a girl & I was new in school–
High School!
Those crucial years! We ALL say it! I think I persisted a good whole 18 months,
and left with average grades. I also knew I could have done so much better, had I
stayed and endured the cruel torment from girls my own age, girls that simply knew
no better. No, it was easier to leave.
It was the early seventees, I was bound to find a job- I was a girl.
Today- a mother of three– a suburban wife. Not your typical, but suburban none the less.
Our first test of faith through loss, was the year we lost my Nanna. Ultimately I think the
moment I realised that something was brewing on our future horizons. Many moments we
experienced bolting lights of reality! They would seem to strike out of the blue, with such force
I wondered if we had any ‘back up reserved energy’ to see the next round!
It’s funny how many coincidences exist in each lifetime-not always pleasant ones.
For the very age I had been diagnosed with Epilepsy, in years to come, the very path would
carry my son.
He was 14. A loving young boy with a mighty big heart. His passions not unlike that of other
teens his age. His was Football. He lived and breathed it.
It was after he suffered a terrible blow to his head, that he began having seizures. They have
now lasted a total of 8years. I’ve had to watch in helplessness while HE endured all the real horrors
that go hand in hand with a fit. Many times I could only pray in my mind for them to stop, for him to
hear me as I desperately tried to reach that tiny corner in his brain, that may have had just enough
strength, to rise above the electrical storm. Only once did that happen, as his seizures worsened, so
did the power of the storms. His medication changed once I finally changed doctors. His last seizure
almost 6 months ago, which is the best it has been in years!
The downside plain & simple: how does a young man adjust to a society that STILL knows so little,
and simply because they themselves, are afraid of the storm.
He tolerated all the harshness, the cruel words out of ignorant mouths-he also finished High School.
The upside: he is loved, by those who choose to know him.
This is his road which we travel together.
Because of him, I choose to learn more, and God willing – educate!
If more ears were open to those who try effortlessly to teach about this illness, we could make such a difference to so many affected by it-Don’t fear Epilepsy, be educated!

Visit the associated Link to this illness-Epilepsy

2 Comments »

  1. My mother was diagnosed with Epilepsy when she was pregnant with me. She was married and I would be the first of her four children. She hit a tree while driving and could not remember what happened. That was in 1959 when the word was associated with the horrors of severe mental illness. I grew up not speaking about it to anyone. We didn’t even speak about amongst the family. It’s so funny that you post this becuase my brother and I had a discussion about how the effects of a parent with this illness can have lasting effects on their children. It creates a world where vulnerability and protection exist in a mind that is not mature enough to handle it. I will have to visit this again when I can speak from a calmer heart than the six year old one that is typing now.

    Comment by monicawrites | October 18, 2007

  2. Thanks for posting Monica and please do drop by agian when you are able!

    Cheers

    Comment by freesiagal | October 18, 2007


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