another newbie

Welcome to the Coping With Epilepsy Forums

Welcome to the Coping With Epilepsy forums - a peer support community for folks dealing (directly or indirectly) with seizure disorders. You can visit the forum page to see the list of forum nodes (categories/rooms) for topics.

Please have a look around and if you like what you see, please consider registering an account and joining the discussions. When you register an account and log in, you may enjoy additional benefits including no ads, access to members only (ie. private) forum nodes and more. Registering an account is free - you have nothing to lose!

chlobug

New
Messages
6
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Hey there everyone!!!

Let me begin by saying that way back when (this last fall) when I finally took my health into my own hands and got ready to see a neurologist, this site in particular gave me the emotional and mental strength to know that I wasn't just "making up" all my "twitches" and "eye-rolls" and "space-outs" and seeing the courage that others had gave me the courage I needed to make that first appointment. Thank you all from the very bottom of my epileptic heart!!!

That said, today is truly the first day I feel okay saying that I have epilepsy. As my doctors have told me repeatedly, and which I'm starting to own proudly, everything about my case seems to be atypical. I am a 31 year old woman who just got a working diagnosis of Juvenile Myoclonic Epilepsy. While I have dozens of myoclonic jerks and twitches a day (oops there goes another coffee mug, oops there I go down another flight of stairs) and about the same amount of absence seizures (I'm sorry what was that I was just saying....) I'm lucky (if you can call it that) in that my tonic clonic have only come five times while I've been awake though the injuries I wake up with indicate that they visit me in my sleep with alarming regularity.

While my symptoms are all more or less textbook and the progression seems to fit JME like a glove my brain decided to just chill out for the EEGs and while I may still have to do a long-term hospital stay for observation at some point I started medication last week, knowing that if the medication affected the symptoms then ladies and gentlemen we would have a winner. Now I hate putting anything not grown from the green earth in my body so for me to jump for joy, literally, once I had a prescription in hand, whatever my brain has been doing to my body has gotten me run just about into the ground completely. Long story short (to late, I know...) about a week after beginning the zonegran (100mg/day to start) I only counted FIVE, count them... FIVE twitches or jerks or whatever you want to call them all day long today and I know this is just the beginning of another long road but at least now I know what I'm up against and can do something about it, even if it's simply treating myself gently when I should.

It would take way too long to detail the long chain of events that lead to it taking 31 years to figure that all out but in brief I've been called everything from inattentive to clumsy to rude to overdramatic because of the fireworks in my brain over the years and I can't believe the relief of knowing that there is a reason and that it is not my fault.

Wow, I didn't mean to write all that as an "intro" but there ya go. I'm going to have to get my feet wet in here and look around now that I'm all registered and finally owning the actions of my own brain and body for what they are (and they've been pretty funny at times, there is a certain slapstick humor to banging your head against a wall while leaning against it after all.)

Be well all
-C-
 
Welcome Chlobug

Good to have you here. I've always had epilepsy so I've never had trouble accepting that it's part of who I am. I am however rather proud that the cause for it is a lesion in the hypothalamus of the brain which is very unusual. I'm so unique! (proudly puffing chest out).

When I was younger I also went through a phase where if it wasn't "natural" I didn't want it. I decided one day that my seizures weren't too bad (all partials) so I just stopped taking my medications. That was the first time I ever convulsed. All of a sudden "unnatural" medications weren't too bad.

Welcome to the site. Make yourself comfortable, check out all the nooks & crannies & see if you find anything interesting that you haven't already.
 
From one Newb ie to another, Welcome!! Glad to see that you have posted your story. As scary as Epilepsy can be it is also myserious in a lot of ways. Pleanty of wonderful stories here and wonderful feedbacks!
 
Hi chlobug, welcome!

Make yourself at home, and help yourself to some punch.

I'm in the Boston area too. Can I ask who your neurologist is?
 
C,

Welcome! I'm so glad you are here. And I'm glad the forum helped you find the resolve to see a neuro. This forum has done a lot for me, too. I don't know how I could have gotten along early in my diagnosis without the help and support of everyone here.

:)
 
thanks etc...

Thanks for making me feel so welcome :)

Yeah, it's amazing how simply feeling you're not alone can turn around a bad day and lord knows I think we've all had more of those than we like to remember. I'm sure like everyone here I've been through the months on months of tests and the waiting for appointments and the anxiety over results and the not knowing what to expect and there were so many sleepless nights when I would troll around on here and read about folks who were getting negative EEGs or had just gotten back from an MRI and up till this week I had no idea what my outcome would be but if you all could do it, heck, so could I. I know I sound all cheesy but it really meant a lot to me and please excuse the gushing... :oops:

Oh and Nakamova, I'm gonna send you a message with my neurologists info but suffice it to say he was really a good match for me and was very curious (a quality I love to see in a medical professional), very good at explaining things, incredibly good at asking questions that put the big picture together (figured everyone woke up with the insides of their cheeks chewed up so badly it was painful to eat every now and then...), and really intuitive as well. After our initial visit he had me in for the first round of MRI and EEG within two weeks if I remember right (which I felt was really quick in the whole hospital/medical world) and over the next few months we've been having fun exhausting all the rest of the tests my insurance will cover. I feel really lucky/blessed. Not to say I didn't earn this karma, I'll have to tell you all about the time I was at breakfast with my boyfriend at the time at our favorite corner joint and took out a coffee cup with my face (last time I saw my "real" front teeth) on the way to the floor via the table next to me and the chair to my right during my 2nd waking full-blown, but still, I've read stories so much more trying than mine, I just hope everyone can find some peace with their own story, ya know...?
 
Back
Top Bottom