Saturday started out like any other. Early morning shopping, working on the house, trying to pull James away from his wonderful computer Mine-craft game. We finally succeeded and went out for more errands. James fell asleep on the way to Costco, weird but it is the weekend and little man is entitled to extra sleep. He woke up when we asked him to get out of the car. Got into Costco and James and I sat at the cafe area and waited for our lunches to arrive. One bite into his pizza while waiting for his drink to arrive, something happened. My husband had gone to get the drinks and came back and asked what was going on. I must have been in shock and simply stated, "James is having a seizure." I must have snapped out of it at that point and went into epilepsy mode. Make sure ... this and it is best if he is ... that. The seizure was relatively short, about a minute but seemed like it lasted forever. As James came out of it, he sat back up. During the seizure his head went quickly towards the table, good thing his plate of pizza was there to soften the fall! IF James had been standing he would have went head first onto the concrete floor in Costco! Anyway... James reported generally feeling unwell and shaking on the inside after he recovered. He was as white as a sheet including his lips. I started to feel better as his color returned. Lots of conversations about seizures and epilepsy. His sister was contacted via texting and his nanny was also updated. The whole family is a little (by "a little" I mean a freakin' ton!!) freaked out. James is fine and his neurologist and classroom teacher have been updated. Medication will be increased and he will have an appointment with the neurologist when school lets out in four weeks. Seizure log will be created and follow him to and from school. It is a whole new way of looking at our little man now. Frequent checks on his status will be conducted while he is in his room. We call his name every ten minutes or so, if he is quiet, and if he answers, great, if not... we do a walk by. This is just another step to understanding James. He was diagnosed with Epilepsy when he was four, but seven years later it is a slap in the face reality.
I Have Epilepsy What is Your Story?
PEACE
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