On a flight home, a stranger helped her understand what came next

In the summer of 1995, when she was 15, Rebecca Simonitsch woke up in the hospital.She later learned she had had a series of convulsive seizures that put her into a coma.

For the next three years, she took medication to prevent future episodes.At 18, before she left for college, her doctors took her off the medication.That's when she began noticing more subtle kinds of seizures, known as focal seizures.

She later realized she had probably been experiencing them on and off ever since she left the hospital."The average person would likely have never known when I was having a seizure," Simonitsch said."[But] if I tried to speak during them, my words would come out sounding a little like gibberish.

 And then I would also feel nausea, weakness and fatigue."Simonitsch was diagnosed with epilepsy.She cycled through multiple medications to stop the seizures, but nothing worked.

She could no longer drive, and the side effects of the medication became unmanageable.By the time she was 20, it was clear something had to change.That winter, she flew from Charleston to Baltimore to meet with a neurologist at Johns Hopkins Hospital.

After many tests, he identified the source of her seizures — scar tissue in her left temporal lobe — and told her she was a candidate for brain surgery.On the flight home, Simonitsch kept replaying what the doctor had told her."And like so many patients who receive difficult or big news, I had really only absorbed 10 to 15 percent of the conversation.And now I had so many questions," Simonitsch said."So I just recall being on the plane, looking out the window and feeling so many emotions in that moment…everything from fear to worry to relief."As she continued to grapple with these feelings, the man sitting next to her struck up a conversation.

He asked her what she was doing in Baltimore, and she told him about the surgery."He turned to look at me.And he shared with me that he had an expertise in neuropsychology, and he had worked with pa...

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Publisher: NPR News

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