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BOY'S AFFLICTION SPAWNS EPILEPSY GROUP : PARENTS FORM SOCIETY TO HELP EPILEPTICS.


Byline: Alicia Doyle Daily News Staff Writer

Cody Slinger turned 15 last week, and just started his first year at Camarillo High School. Though eager to learn, Cody is just now realizing that he's different, his parents say.

Cody has started asking questions about his future. His father, Scott Slinger, recalls not long ago, when Cody asked if he would ever have a girlfriend. Once, Cody said he cannot wait to turn 16 and drive.

His father says he often asks, ``will these seizures ever stop?''

The Slingers are always honest.

``We don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 what will happen in his future,'' Scott Slinger said. ``We just want to give him the best quality of life right now.''

Cody has epilepsy. He looks like a typical 15-year-old - a blond-haired high school student in T-shirt and jeans with a taste for live hockey and pizza, but every few minutes, his blue eyes Blue eyes are eyes that have blue irises (see eye color), and may also refer to:
  • IBM have a project named "BlueEyes" to develop computational devices that mimic perception.
  • Old blue eyes is also a common reference to Frank Sinatra and Sven-Göran Eriksson.
 glaze over glaze over
Verb

to become dull through boredom or inattention: the listener's eyes glaze over

Verb 1.
 with open-eyed momentary blackouts - ``absence seizures.''

Cody's parents, Jody and Scott Slinger, discovered their son had the disease when he was diagnosed at age 5. The reality was devastating dev·as·tate  
tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates
1. To lay waste; destroy.

2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark.
, Scott Slinger remembers.

``I can't fix it,'' Scott Slinger said, recalling his initial feelings of denial, frustration and self-blame. ``Dads are supposed to protect their children. I felt like I let him down.''

For years, the Years, The

the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109]

See : Time
 couple searched for support groups to help them understand Cody's disorder. Though they gained some advice, the Slingers could only find groups for mostly adults with epilepsy and their loved ones.

There was nothing local that catered to parents of children with the disease, the Slingers said.

So three years ago, they started their own support group in Ventura County - the Tri County Epilepsy Society. The group has since grown to serve anyone with the same fears the Slingers faced 10 years ago.

``We want people to know that they're not alone,'' Scott Slinger said. ``We're not doctors. We're not specialists. We're just two parents who have gone through it.''

Cody takes medication - the little pills slow his seizures down to one every seven or eight minutes - as opposed to a blackout every one or two minutes without medication.

The pills help, but they are also a part of the cause of Cody's slow maturation rate, the Slingers said. During his seizures he is unable to learn or absorb his surroundings. In between seizures, he is sometimes so groggy grog·gy  
adj. grog·gi·er, grog·gi·est
Unsteady and dazed; shaky.



[From grog.]


grog
 from the pills that he feels separated from the world.

Cody's maturity level is five years behind his peers. He studies from second-grade textbooks, his parents said.

Jody Slinger, president of the Tri County Epilepsy Society, said others with epilepsy who attend meetings have helped her understand Cody's disorder.

``I am a mother of a son with epilepsy,'' she said. ``I don't know what he's going through. But if I can listen to an adult or young adult expressing what it feels like, I can better understand my son.''

Cody is among the 2.5 million Americans who have epilepsy, according to the American Epilepsy Society. Roughly 125,000 new patients are diagnosed each year.

According to the Epilepsy Foundation of America The Epilepsy Foundation, also Epilepsy Foundation of America (EFA), is a non-profit national foundation, headquartered in Landover, Maryland, dedicated to the welfare of people with epilepsy and seizure disorders. , the disease often starts in early childhood, and sometimes lasts throughout life.

Epilepsy is a functional disorder functional disorder
n.
A physical disorder in which the symptoms have no known or detectable organic basis but are believed to be the result of psychological factors such as emotional conflicts or stress. Also called functional disease.
 of the brain, a kind of occasional glitch A temporary or random hardware malfunction. It is possible that a bug in a program may cause the hardware to appear as if it had a glitch in it and vice versa. At times it can be extremely difficult to determine whether a problem lies within the hardware or the software. See glitch attack.  in the vast internal electrical system which controls everything people feel and do, society officials said.

These brief malfunctions - called seizures - may temporarily block awareness. They can also cause uncontrollable shaking, convulsions Convulsions
Also termed seizures; a sudden violent contraction of a group of muscles.

Mentioned in: Heat Disorders
, confusion, or affect the senses.

Phyllis Rutola, vice president of the Tri County Epilepsy Society, has no children or relatives with the disease.

But as a nurse who performs brave wave tests at the Vista Del Mar Psychiatric Hospital psychiatric hospital
n.
A hospital for the care and treatment of patients affected with acute or chronic mental illness. Also called mental hospital.
, she has seen hundreds of patients with epilepsy over the years.

``There's a stigma attached to these people,'' said Rutola, who lives in Newbury Park. ``At one time, they were believed to be possessed by the devil. They were put in mental institutions.''

The solution of this ignorance is education, Rutola believes.

At monthly meetings, the Slingers remind people that epileptics are not mentally ill. They shatter the myth that epileptics aren't allowed to go to school. And they enlighten those who think that epileptics are not allowed to marry in some states.

FOR INFORMATION

For more information about the Tri County Epilepsy Society or to attend a meeting, call 484-1549. Informational pamphlets are also available.

CAPTION(S):

Photo

Photo: (color) Cody Slinger, 15, holds his pet iguana iguana (ĭgwä`nə), name for several large lizards of the family Iguanidae, found in tropical America and the Galapagos. The common iguana (Iguana iguana  WildThing while his mother, Jody, cuddles the family dog in one hand and provides a perch for a macaw macaw: see parrot.
macaw

Any of about 18 species of large tropical New World parrots (subfamily Psittacinae) with very long tails and big sickle-shaped beaks. Macaws eat fruits and nuts.
 in the other. Seated behind are Cody's brother, Jason, and his father, Scott.

Jeremy Greene/Special to the Daily News
COPYRIGHT 1996 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Sep 30, 1996
Words:780
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