Alicealice
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Hi everyone
I'm alice and I was diagnosed with temporal lobe epilepsy a few days ago.
I think that I have been having partial seizures, I think some were simple and some complex, and I have had a few generalised seizures in the last few years I think.
My diagnosis was based on an MRI report and an EEG, and my own reports of what I have experienced, which has been very hard to describe. My experiences have previously been diagnosed as anxiety disorder, depression and migraine.
I think at times seizures have lead to or caused panic attacks and that I have been experienced both simultaneously, or a panic attack has occurred early in the seizure and then carried on for a few minutes.
Since the diagnosis, daily small seizures have come and gone, and I have not had a panic attack. I think that this is because I know what it is now. I can't say I don't feel anxious anymore, because I definitely have some anxiety about the future, but somehow the seizures don't make me anxious at that moment. I just let them pass, even though they are very uncomfortable and I do always have some tears afterwards.
I am not sure how long I have been having seizures. I am still making friends with this word because many of my experiences fit with descriptions of TLE, especially those of hearing, smelling, seeing differently, but even more so, the sense of a grand spiritual presence, or an enormous spiritual experience, and of the emotional roller coaster i have heard mentioned.
I have been having what my doctor called 'psychic phenomena' since my twenties, about ten years ago, but i think those experiences also happened when I was younger. They just weren't as pronounced. Also, I went to a Steiner School where spiritual phenomena seems part of the furniture and very much accepted, and spoken of as fact outside of the class room by parents and friends in the community. My own experiences of 'the other side' had not started happening yet in my school years, but it was something I always assumed to be real in some way, in another dimension. We were not a religious family, but my mother (who had discovered waldorf education when I was a baby and moved my older brothers there immediately) held and holds deep spiritual beliefs related to her interest in Rudolf Steiner's philosophies and clairvoyant experiences. I have found the 'anthoposophists' (the people who live their lives with these philosophies, to be a bit over the top, but I have never felt the need to rebel, because it never felt dogmatic. Whilst the school was surrounded by people who read Steiner's books and live their lives with this wisdom/information/inspiration/belief (always hard to find the right words), the education system itself encourages children to be individuals, to have their own thoughts, so most students take the anthroposophists with a pinch of salt. There beliefs about the way the world, the spirit, the mind, and the universe works is not actually taught in the curriculum, so it's not like any of the students really know what their parents/teachers/family friends within the community are actually on about!! It's more a method of education than a taught philosophy. And whilst some families live in close proximity to the school and its village community, plenty of people like had another more 'normal' world because they live in neighbouring towns and cities.
Anyway I just explained all of that because the thing i am finding hardest to deal with regarding my diagnosis, is this 'psychic phenomena' element of the TLE. Medicine is telling me that these experiences are caused by a brain dysfunction. And I can accept that the brain jam and myoclonic jerks and the speech deficit are all dysfunctional, but the 'psychic phemonena'? - I have believed in these experiences and they have been dear to me. Many have been beautiful and comforting.
That said, I have at times been very concerned about my mental health, when I have had strong experiences of the 'other side' that have been very frightening at times. In adulthood, away from the Steiner community, I have felt like I am a very different kind of person to the people around me. I have had lots of beautiful deep friendships, and I have and am really loved I think, and I felt understood by my nearest and dearest. Until the last few years, which coincides with the progression of my epilepsy I now realise, I have felt deeply misunderstood. Not even misunderstood, just not understood at all.
I have less friends than I used to because of life circumstances, the end of a long-term relationship three years ago, moving house a few times, and my increasingly isolated existence, which began two years ago when I had a major emotional crash after ending a whirlwind rebound romance with a man who had become physically threatening, and went to stay with my mum for a few weeks. I was prescribed antidepressants which caused continual convulsions which were diagnosed as anxiety, and thus and increase in dosage. I recovered from this crash but I don't feel that I have ever really recovered fully. I have been desperately trying to figure out how to get out this 'anxiety disorder' that everyone including myself has been calling it. I have been blaming myself for my inability to cope with life and all the time wondering "what has happened to me? Who have I turned into? I used to be the most sociable person I know, I was so confident and comfortable, and so much fun, and now I am so serious, and so weak, why can't I deal with life? Why am I so incapable?"
I have been studying to become an osteopath and I am half way there. But what everyone else has done in two years, I have taken five to do. I had to start again/repeat the first and second year, and I am about to repeat the third year of the four year course. I am hoping that having medication is going to change my life and make me able to continue and qualify as an osteopath. I have been a massage therapist for fifteen years and wanted to become an osteopath when I left school seventeen years ago.
I feel a bit funny outpouring all of this onto a website, and i have never done this before, and I have a slight uncomfortable feeling about needing attention. But I am giving this a go because I want to sure mine and other people's experiences, and I know that I can't cope alone with this anymore. So I have to be brave and share what has made me feel so confused, so misunderstood, so shameful, and yet so profound, gifted and blessed.
I have not read anything on the website yet!!! But I just had a good feeling about it. I am looking forward to reading everyone's posts.
Thank you for listening, if you got to the end of my long first post!
Love to all, alice x
I'm alice and I was diagnosed with temporal lobe epilepsy a few days ago.
I think that I have been having partial seizures, I think some were simple and some complex, and I have had a few generalised seizures in the last few years I think.
My diagnosis was based on an MRI report and an EEG, and my own reports of what I have experienced, which has been very hard to describe. My experiences have previously been diagnosed as anxiety disorder, depression and migraine.
I think at times seizures have lead to or caused panic attacks and that I have been experienced both simultaneously, or a panic attack has occurred early in the seizure and then carried on for a few minutes.
Since the diagnosis, daily small seizures have come and gone, and I have not had a panic attack. I think that this is because I know what it is now. I can't say I don't feel anxious anymore, because I definitely have some anxiety about the future, but somehow the seizures don't make me anxious at that moment. I just let them pass, even though they are very uncomfortable and I do always have some tears afterwards.
I am not sure how long I have been having seizures. I am still making friends with this word because many of my experiences fit with descriptions of TLE, especially those of hearing, smelling, seeing differently, but even more so, the sense of a grand spiritual presence, or an enormous spiritual experience, and of the emotional roller coaster i have heard mentioned.
I have been having what my doctor called 'psychic phenomena' since my twenties, about ten years ago, but i think those experiences also happened when I was younger. They just weren't as pronounced. Also, I went to a Steiner School where spiritual phenomena seems part of the furniture and very much accepted, and spoken of as fact outside of the class room by parents and friends in the community. My own experiences of 'the other side' had not started happening yet in my school years, but it was something I always assumed to be real in some way, in another dimension. We were not a religious family, but my mother (who had discovered waldorf education when I was a baby and moved my older brothers there immediately) held and holds deep spiritual beliefs related to her interest in Rudolf Steiner's philosophies and clairvoyant experiences. I have found the 'anthoposophists' (the people who live their lives with these philosophies, to be a bit over the top, but I have never felt the need to rebel, because it never felt dogmatic. Whilst the school was surrounded by people who read Steiner's books and live their lives with this wisdom/information/inspiration/belief (always hard to find the right words), the education system itself encourages children to be individuals, to have their own thoughts, so most students take the anthroposophists with a pinch of salt. There beliefs about the way the world, the spirit, the mind, and the universe works is not actually taught in the curriculum, so it's not like any of the students really know what their parents/teachers/family friends within the community are actually on about!! It's more a method of education than a taught philosophy. And whilst some families live in close proximity to the school and its village community, plenty of people like had another more 'normal' world because they live in neighbouring towns and cities.
Anyway I just explained all of that because the thing i am finding hardest to deal with regarding my diagnosis, is this 'psychic phenomena' element of the TLE. Medicine is telling me that these experiences are caused by a brain dysfunction. And I can accept that the brain jam and myoclonic jerks and the speech deficit are all dysfunctional, but the 'psychic phemonena'? - I have believed in these experiences and they have been dear to me. Many have been beautiful and comforting.
That said, I have at times been very concerned about my mental health, when I have had strong experiences of the 'other side' that have been very frightening at times. In adulthood, away from the Steiner community, I have felt like I am a very different kind of person to the people around me. I have had lots of beautiful deep friendships, and I have and am really loved I think, and I felt understood by my nearest and dearest. Until the last few years, which coincides with the progression of my epilepsy I now realise, I have felt deeply misunderstood. Not even misunderstood, just not understood at all.
I have less friends than I used to because of life circumstances, the end of a long-term relationship three years ago, moving house a few times, and my increasingly isolated existence, which began two years ago when I had a major emotional crash after ending a whirlwind rebound romance with a man who had become physically threatening, and went to stay with my mum for a few weeks. I was prescribed antidepressants which caused continual convulsions which were diagnosed as anxiety, and thus and increase in dosage. I recovered from this crash but I don't feel that I have ever really recovered fully. I have been desperately trying to figure out how to get out this 'anxiety disorder' that everyone including myself has been calling it. I have been blaming myself for my inability to cope with life and all the time wondering "what has happened to me? Who have I turned into? I used to be the most sociable person I know, I was so confident and comfortable, and so much fun, and now I am so serious, and so weak, why can't I deal with life? Why am I so incapable?"
I have been studying to become an osteopath and I am half way there. But what everyone else has done in two years, I have taken five to do. I had to start again/repeat the first and second year, and I am about to repeat the third year of the four year course. I am hoping that having medication is going to change my life and make me able to continue and qualify as an osteopath. I have been a massage therapist for fifteen years and wanted to become an osteopath when I left school seventeen years ago.
I feel a bit funny outpouring all of this onto a website, and i have never done this before, and I have a slight uncomfortable feeling about needing attention. But I am giving this a go because I want to sure mine and other people's experiences, and I know that I can't cope alone with this anymore. So I have to be brave and share what has made me feel so confused, so misunderstood, so shameful, and yet so profound, gifted and blessed.
I have not read anything on the website yet!!! But I just had a good feeling about it. I am looking forward to reading everyone's posts.
Thank you for listening, if you got to the end of my long first post!
Love to all, alice x