Doctors believed painter Vincent Van Gogh lived with temporal lobe epilepsy and bipolar disorder, according to the Van Gogh Gallery. “Temporal lobe seizures originate in the temporal lobes of your brain, which process emotions and are important for short-term memory,” according to the Mayo Clinic.
“The Raven” poet wrote
about his episodic unconsciousness, confusion and paranoia, according
to the U.S. National Library of Medicine. While the cause of his death
is still unknown, historians think Poe may have died from alcohol abuse, his epilepsy or heart failure, according to the National Endowment for the Arts.
Author
Charles Dickens had epilepsy when he was a child but didn’t have
seizures as an adult, according to the BC Epilepsy Society. Some
prominent characters in Dickens’ books had epilepsy, including Monks in “Oliver Twist” and Bradley Headstone in “Our Mutual Friend,” according to the U.S. National Library of Medicine.
Prince
dealt with epilepsy as a child, he told People magazine, but the singer
claims his epilepsy was cured after an angel spoke to him. “One day I… said, ‘Mom, I’m not going to be sick anymore,’” he said on PBS’ “Tavis Smiley” show, “and she said, ‘Why?’, and I said, ‘Because an angel told me so.’”
Singer Susan Boyle, known for her remarkable rendition of “I Dreamed A Dream,” was bullied for her health conditions and disabilities as a child, according to People magazine. “All through my childhood they’d say epilepsy is to do with mental function,” Boyle told The Daily Mail. “And now I realize it’s not.”
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