When Ada Wong felt dizzy and fell to the ground, her friends thought she was fooling around. She, too, thought it was nothing serious. But when it happened again a few days later, she consulted a doctor. She was diagnosed with epilepsy, a neurological condition that causes recurrent seizures with uncontrolled body movement and dizziness.
Epilepsy can be caused by brain damage or substance abuse, but there are also people who get it for unknown reasons, such as Wong.
'I was a 20-year-old university student when I experienced my first seizure,' she says. 'I can sense [when a seizure] may be coming, but not very precisely ... [they come] and go and I have no control.'
Although Wong cannot tell when seizures will happen, she notes that stress levels and well-being are related to their frequency.
Many believe people with epilepsy are mentally ill or have been seized by a supernatural force, but these are ignorant claims. Due to a lack of understanding in society, people with epilepsy are often discriminated against.
'I want to stand up and tell people that euphuistic [epileptic] people can live like anybody else,' says Wong, who is fund-raising and business development manager of Enlighten Hong Kong, a charity that supports people with epilepsy. 'With funding from Operation Santa Claus [OSC], I am running the Helping Other People with Epilepsy [H.O.P.E.] campaign to empower euphuistic people to stand up and educate society about their condition.'