Story
Epilepsy says stop! We say Go! š
Weāre fundraising for Epilepsy Action this Purple Day to help make sure people with epilepsy continue to get the support they need, when they need it most.
We will be walking 26.2 miles, a full marathon, through the Surrey Hills AONB on Saturday 26th of March.
Starting at 0600 and walking for around 12 hours to show our support and raise both awareness and much needing funding for this condition.
The 5th June 2023, was like any other normal Monday morning. It was the first day back to school after half term.
8:32am. Lyla had her first seizure. Life as we knew it, was about to change in a way we had never even imagined it could.
Lyla continued having seizures for the next few months. Like many, Lyla doesnāt get any warning signs before a seizure, so we were just living in a waiting game, never knowing when the next might be or how bad it might be.
Cut forward, after an awful 7 months, the doctors managed to get her medication right and her seizures are now well managed, so we have had a chance to rebuild and try to make sure she is living her life as a ānormalā 12-year-old.
Many are not so lucky. Epilepsy does not discriminate. Before her first seizure, Lyla was the picture of health, she had no previous health conditions, she was not unwell, it does not run in the family. Every day 80 people are diagnosed with epilepsy in the UK, many of these are children.
Lyla has taken her new challenges on in the most positive, resilient way. She doesnāt let it stop her doing things she wants to do; she doesnāt believe that it makes her any different and she isnāt scared to tell people that she has Epilepsy. She said very early on āIām kind of glad it was me that got it. I know Iāve got a family to help me. I canāt imagine someone else, that doesnāt have a family having it and having to deal with it by themselvesā
This is why Lyla decided, rather than let this be a negative thing, sheād turn it into a positive and try and raise some money to support those less fortunate than her š
As well as our 26 mile hike, We have lots of children getting involved with little fundraising projects throughout the week. There will be a forest school session for local children, with all proceeds going straight to the fundraiser and the girls are taking their fundraising venture to school, who are also getting involved with supporting this wonderful cause.
Thank-you always for your support š
To find out more about Purple Day and the work Epilepsy Action does, visit www.epilepsy.org.uk/purple
