![]() The first place I could ever formally name my odd reaction to light was in an office at the local neurological center. The words petit mal epilepsy (absence seizures) were almost comforting because they sounded so official, despite the fact that it was an affliction and, yes, it was afflicting me. At least my vocabulary for seizures expanded beyond crazy trips to Nowhere Land I take while riding a bus, while flipping on the trampoline, etc. I also knew that in older novels, characters with epilepsy were considered to be possessed. I remember watching my mother sitting quietly in the corner of the doctor’s office that day, two years ago. I could see her face vanishing and reappearing as the doctor’s white-sleeved arm bent and extended over my face. He was moving my limbs around, checking for flexibility. After about two minutes of this air-Twister, he reviewed my scores on the EEG and MRI tests I had taken earlier that month. He said, “These scores verify that you have epilepsy. People with absence seizures are typically physically disabled.”
Misunderstandings like this, with general people and professionals alike, have always been a part of dealing with absence seizures. I mean, consider what the characters in those novels had to put up with! A lot of misunderstandings are unavoidable, even in an open-minded society free of harsh labels like possession. Following that adrenaline-rush-day of diagnosis, however, the effort to make people understand became tiring, especially when many people would mistake it for a mental instability. My story tapered down from a grand, elaborate explanation of the disorder—that would make any neurologist swoon from my knowledge of scientific terms—to a curt, “It’s what happens when the sunlight hits my eyes.” Developing patience was a part of growing up, despite how inadequate I felt at first from having the disorder. So what are absence seizures, according to a person who experiences them firsthand? To all the people who ever sat next to me on a sunny day on the school bus, they were what you mistook for disinterest when I rolled my eyes and turned my head away from you as you spoke to me. To the people who have marched beside me in band, they were what made me drop the slide of my trombone to the ground. To all of the people who have the condition and may be confused and frustrated with all the complex terms they hear from their doctors, absence seizures are a test. Not a three-letter acronym test like the SAT. Not even a test that can measure things other people can read off a paper and tell you their meaning. Keep reading. The Awkward Age can be a transforming era in life that involves temporarily morphing into some kind of reptile—internally or externally. By the time I made it to the neurologist’s office, I was already a turtle: an introvert who retreated behind a hard shell. However, the antiseizure medications I was taking transformed me into a Teenage Mutant Neuro-Turtle—in some ways they empowered me, but in others, I was still abnormal. For instance, the first medication did nothing to remove my seizures, even though my doctor and I agreed to increase my dosage every two months if nothing happened. The most the medication did remove was the hair from my head and my normal bodily functions. I apologize for the disturbing images—if they disturb you—but that’s the truth. It’s worth knowing that it’s never wrong to approach your doctor if you don’t agree with the medicine he prescribes for you.
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