That is a terrible thing. When I was a teenager, I started having weird
behavior, then the seizures started. Well, before I was diagnosed with
epilepsy, my parents, not knowing anything about seizure disorders, took me
to a psychiatrist. The psychiatrist immediately diagnosed me as manic
depressive. A year later, after an EEG and a visit to a neurologist, I was
told that I did NOT, in fact, have bipolar disorder but epilepsy. Although I
was never institutionalized, I guess this sort of thing could still happen.

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Mindy
If you can read this, you're not the president.
> That is a terrible thing. When I was a teenager, I started having weird
> behavior, then the seizures started. Well, before I was diagnosed with
> epilepsy, my parents, not knowing anything about seizure disorders, took me
> to a psychiatrist.
Epilepsy was a very hush hush subject when we were kids (I turned 40 this
month), and although I'm not as old as you, I used to get a similar sort
of treatment in my teens too. I doubt if too many people think that way
today though, as the world wasn't that educated in epilepsy then, and
doctors research was very limited too - but I wouldn't say that *all*
people don't think this way, as you always get the odd one here and there.
What you had in your teens though, sounds like "Complex partial" seizures,
where you wonder around the place, doing strange things whilst in a sort
of daze/trance - I've heard them been compared to sleep-walking a few
times, and I've been getting them for decades mixed with other types of
seizures.
Take care
Sofie

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Mindy - 24 Jan 2006 19:51 GMT
I'm only 26. This happened just recently, I'd say 10 or 12 years ago. :-)

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Mindy
If you can read this, you're not the president.
>> That is a terrible thing. When I was a teenager, I started having weird
>> behavior, then the seizures started. Well, before I was diagnosed with
[quoted text clipped - 18 lines]
>
> Sofie
Dave Keays - 25 Jan 2006 22:44 GMT
>>That is a terrible thing. When I was a teenager, I started having weird
>>behavior, then the seizures started. Well, before I was diagnosed with
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
> doctors research was very limited too - but I wouldn't say that *all*
> people don't think this way, as you always get the odd one here and there.
I am convinced that the hushness will continue until we get the nerve to quit
hiding it. Until then people will react out of ignorance and fear fed by that
ignorance. It is not their fault.
No, you didn't put blame on anybody but the EFA did in my time. Looking at their
web-site they seem to have mellowed a bit. Now allowing for the individual to
decide when disclosure is necessary.
Epilepsy is no longer a major factor in my life. A tumor was found and they
removed my right temporal-lobe in 2000, the same year I turned 40.
> What you had in your teens though, sounds like "Complex partial" seizures,
> where you wonder around the place, doing strange things whilst in a sort
> of daze/trance - I've heard them been compared to sleep-walking a few
> times, and I've been getting them for decades mixed with other types of
> seizures.
The biggest problem I use to have with complex-partial seizures was that I
looked healthy to others so they refused to accept that I was "disabled". A
local heath program wont take me because I had a "long term disability" but SSI
balked because I wasn't "disabled". It took several years to convince them
otherwise.
People want to label a disabled person with either a "physical" or "mental" tag.
Most are not aware of a Neurological problem that messes with your head to the
point that you sometimes appear to have mental problems.
> Take care
>
> Sofie
Dave Keays