arnie
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I'm a normal working woman who has seizures due to epilepsy.
You are nowhere near normal, Q, and thank heavens for that!!

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I'm a normal working woman who has seizures due to epilepsy.
I don't think anyone in the thread has said they object to saying they have epilepsy, or to others calling them epilepsy sufferers. The term 'epileptic' has quite a different connotation, because it crams our entire identity into our illness instead of making room for all the other things that make us unique.We aren't going to change perceptions if we ourselves "hate the terms". I have epilepsy and always will. I am one of the lucky ones - Dilantin & Phenobarbitol calm the electrical storm in my brain.
But I will always be an epileptic and I tell people to help change their perceptions.
Just my point of view.
Approaching the whole thing with a sense of humour is great but for me there came a point where I just wasn't allowed to forget that I had epilepsy when in social situations. In my twenties I lived in a different town and my friends there took to calling me 'sparky.' At the time, I thought it was great that they could have a sense of humour about it and took it to mean that they understood. Eventually, though, I found it incredibly stifling to be constantly identified according to my epilepsy. After I moved, I made sure to limit the number of people I told about my epilepsy to those who needed to know and who wouldn't identify me by it. It has been amazingly liberating for me. I prefer to be seen as another person rather than an 'epileptic.'The first epilepsy site I came across was run by a guy who called himself The Spaz.
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she replied "No! but, I thought something wasn't right about her. why is she in college?people who have epilepsy are retarted"
I was embarrassed for the girl they were talking about and myself too. ...
my eccentric, overly dramatic personae. I think.
It's like "handicapped", "disabled", "differently-abled", "challenged"; at some point it becomes nothing more than fashion.
When writing or speaking about people with disabilities it is important to put the person first. Catch-all phrases such as 'the blind', 'the deaf' or 'the disabled, do not reflect the individuality, equality or dignity of people with disabilities.
Term no longer in use: mental handicap, Term Now Used: intellectual disability.
We all try to be sensitive about that stuff, but sooner or later we have to admit that it's not the word that bothers us, it's the condition.
I think we tend to assume that old words are prejudicial. People may have had different ideas about things, some wrong and some right, but they weren't all hateful people.
sooner or later we have to admit that it's not the word that bothers us, it's the condition.
I did want to make the point that as long as people are uncomfortable with epilepsy, we can call it anything we want, but they will still be uncomfortable.
perhaps if we don't make an issue of the word "epileptic", it might help people to be more comfortable with epilepsy.