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Anonymous Story: It’s the not knowing that scares me

IMG_3552This personal story was submitted to Living Well With Epilepsy by an anonymous contributor on her experience with memory loss due to seizure activity.

On May 4, 2011 I had a seizure.

That night I went to a party. My flatmate was ill, so she couldn’t come. When I returned home I went to her room to tell her about the party.  We had the usual after-party chat.

Memory Loss

That’s when I had a seizure. I’m talking a full blown, tonic-clonic seizure at the bottom of her bed. But here’s the thing. I don’t remember getting home, going into her room, or ANY of the conversations we had. Even as I came around, and I kind of remember this, I asked for my flatmate, even though it was her I was talking to. “Go away Rose! I want Jane!” I insisted. My poor flatmate. This was the first seizure she’d seen me have and I didn’t even acknowledge her help!

It was when I fully came round the next day, I spoke to my friend about what had happened. That’s when I became aware of the events of the previous night and the memory gaps I had.

I didn’t know where I was, who I was with or how I got there. I still don’t remember anything that happened. I lost up to 45 minutes of my life.

I don’t know about anyone else, but this always happens to me. My epilepsy has taken away my memories. I wake up from a seizure and have no idea how I got to where am. I had a seizure in the shower one morning, I don’t remember getting in the shower. All I remember is what happened after that. It terrifies me. I don’t seem to have anything that tells me when I am going to have a seizure.

Seizure Clues

Take last week for example, first seizure in over 2 years and I am still only 99% sure I had one. I had a stinking hangover and had my head in the toilet bowl. Next thing I know my flatmate is helping me out of bed and giving me a change of trousers as I had somehow wet my bed. In between those moments I assume I had a seizure. The fact that my tongue was bitten to shreds, my muscles hurt and the fact that I wet the bed were my only clues. Other than that, there was absolutely no give away! No tell tale sign for myself that I was about to go into a joyful spasm for a few minutes.

Not Knowing

From what I have read, people seem to have tastes in their mouth, or smells, or sounds that tell them that a seizure is oncoming! That you better find a comfy place to lie down ’cause you’re about to have a seizure! But me? No. My body doesn’t want me to have warning. Or if it does, it doesn’t want me to remember at least. How very kind. Personally, I find this the hardest part of epilepsy. The not knowing. Scares me every time.

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Jessica K. Smith Founder and CEO; Executive Director
Jessica Keenan Smith is a patient advocate and epilepsy community leader with more than 15 years of experience. As Founder and CEO of Living Well With Epilepsy and Executive Director of ASENT she bridges the gap between the scientific and patient communities, with a particular focus on the needs of the epilepsies. Jessica Keenan Smith is Founder and CEO of Living Well With Epilepsy, an award winning online resource for people affected by epilepsy to share stories and access in-depth information on the disease. Since 2009, Living Well With Epilepsy (https://livingwellwithepilepsy.com) has been featured in Forbes, Wired, NBC, NPR and the cover story of Epilepsy Advocate Magazine and has partnered with companies such as UCB, Lundbeck, Sunovion, Eisai, and more. Ms. Smith is also the Executive Director of the American Society for Experimental Neurotherapeutics (ASENT) (https://asent.org), an organization that brings together leaders from industry, academia, government and advocacy who are engaged in bringing drugs and devices to market across all neurologic disease states. In this role she is responsible for leading a successful scientific journal and annual scientific conference with speakers from all over the world.

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