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Why I speak up about living with epilepsy

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    I have a confession.
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    I have been in an affair
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    since I was 17 years old.
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    I wish I could talk about
    butterflies in my stomach
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    or maps I drew on the ground
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    when I think about this affair,
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    but I cannot.
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    I wish I could talk about
    sweet words spoken
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    or gifts that I received
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    from this affair,
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    but I cannot.
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    All I can tell you about is the aftermath,
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    about days I spent constantly asking
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    why, why, why me?
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    I remember how it all began.
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    I was in my final year of high school,
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    and my class had just won in the sports,
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    so we were singing and dancing
    and hugging each other.
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    I went and took a shower.
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    Then I went for dinner.
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    And when I sat down to eat,
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    my teeth started chattering,
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    and so I couldn't put
    the spoon in my mouth.
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    I rushed to the nurse's office,
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    and because I couldn't talk,
    I just pointed at my mouth.
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    She didn't know what was happening,
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    so she told me to lie down,
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    and it worked.
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    After a few minutes,
    the chattering stopped.
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    I was about to dash out,
    and she told me --
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    no, she insisted -- that I go up
    to the dormitories to sleep.
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    Here I was in my final year of high school
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    just a few months from doing
    my end of high school exams
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    and a few days from doing a set
    of exams we call here in Kenya "mocks,"
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    which are somehow meant to gauge
    how prepared one is for the final exams.
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    There is no way I was going to sleep
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    and let a set of exams mock me.
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    I went to class, sat down,
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    took my Kenyan history notes,
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    and there I was down Kenyan coastal town
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    with the great Mekatilili wa Menza,
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    the Giriama woman who led her people
    against British colonial rule.
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    Then, without any notice,
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    my left hand started jerking,
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    and it was as if I was marking
    imaginary papers.
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    In and out it went,
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    and with every stroke, one by one,
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    my classmates stopped
    concentrating on their reading
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    and started looking at me.
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    And I tried really hard to stop it,
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    but I couldn't
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    because it had a life of its own.
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    And then, when it was sure
    everybody was looking at us,
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    in its final show
    and official introduction,
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    I had my first full-blown seizure,
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    which was the beginning of what
    has been a 15-year long affair.
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    Seizures are the trademark characteristic
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    for most types of epilepsy,
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    and every first ever seizure
    needs to be assessed by a doctor
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    to determine if one has epilepsy,
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    or if it's a symptom of something else.
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    In my case, it was confirmed
    that I had epilepsy.
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    I spent a large chunk of my time
    in hospital and at home,
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    and only went back to do my final exams.
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    I had seizures in between papers,
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    but managed to get good enough grades
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    to be admitted for an Actuarial
    Science degree
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    at the University of Nairobi.
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    (Applause)
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    Unfortunately, I had to drop out
    in my second year.
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    I didn't have good enough coping skills
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    and a support community around me.
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    I was lucky enough to get a job,
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    but I was fired from that job
    when I had a seizure in the workplace.
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    So I found myself in a space
    where I was constantly asking myself
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    why this had to happen to me.
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    I lived in denial for a long time,
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    and the denial was maybe because
    of the things that had happened:
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    dropping out of school
    and being fired from my job.
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    Or maybe it was because
    of the things I had heard about epilepsy
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    and about people living with epilepsy --
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    that they would never live on their own;
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    that they would never travel on their own
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    or even get work;
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    that they were outcasts,
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    with a spirit in them that they needed
    to be delivered from.
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    And so the more I thought
    about these things,
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    the more my seizures became,
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    and I spent days with my legs locked
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    and my speech became blurred,
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    and on days on end, this is how I'd be.
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    Two or three days after a seizure,
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    my head and my head
    would still be twitching.
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    I felt lost,
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    like I'd lost everything,
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    and sometimes,
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    even the will to live.
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    (Sigh)
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    I had so much frustration in me,
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    and so I started writing,
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    because the people around me
    didn't have answers
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    to the questions that I had.
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    And so I wrote my fears
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    and my doubts.
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    I wrote about my good days
    and my bad days and my really ugly days,
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    and I shared them on a blog.
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    And before long,
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    I began to be seen and heard
    by people who had epilepsy
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    and their families,
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    and even those who did not
    have the diagnosis.
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    And I moved from that girl
    who constantly asked why me
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    to one who not only self-advocates,
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    but does it for those who are yet
    to find their voices.
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    (Applause)
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    My seizures are greatly reduced,
    from two to three times a day
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    to sometimes two to three
    times in one year.
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    I went on --
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    (Applause)
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    I went on to employ five people
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    when I began what was Kenya's first
    free mental health
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    and epilepsy support line.
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    And I travel --
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    (Applause)
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    And I travel to speak about my affair,
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    all these things that I had been told
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    people like me living with epilepsy
    could never be able to do.
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    Every year, a population
    as big as 80 percent of Nairobi
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    gets diagnosed with epilepsy
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    across the globe.
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    And they, like me,
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    go through the emotions
    of stigma and exclusion.
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    And so I have made it my life journey
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    to keep these conversations going,
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    and I keep confessing about my affair
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    so that those people who do not
    have the diagnosis
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    might know and might have
    a constant reminder
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    that it is all right to engage
    with people like us,
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    that as long as they pull down
    the walls of stigma and exclusion,
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    that we, just like them,
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    can be able to take anything
    life throws at us.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Why I speak up about living with epilepsy
Speaker:
Sitawa Wafula
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
08:29

English subtitles

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