Abstract
In this article, the author reflects on personal lived experience with epilepsy to explore the therapeutic value of historical context in epilepsy care. The experience of an epilepsy diagnosis is shaped not only by clinical realities, but by a cultural legacy spanning four millennia. From early Mesopotamian texts and Hammurabi's Code to medieval witchcraft trials and 20th-century eugenics, epilepsy has long been associated with fear of the unknown and the resulting “othering” that fuels isolation, discrimination, and persecution. This historical burden continues to shape modern responses to epilepsy, particularly in pediatric contexts, where stigma often arises less from the facts of the condition than from inherited cultural narratives. For some patients, especially adolescents, understanding epilepsy's place in history offers a framework for meaning-making, identity, and resilience. Integrating historical context into clinical dialogue may help transform marginalization into connection—grounding personal challenges within a larger human story.
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