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I live with Tourette Syndrome

Decided to write one of my rambling posts about my life that few if any will read. But the act of publicly putting it out there is the important bit for me.

I don't remember ever not having tics but being in my mother's chaotic environment and in and out of care homes means I was 17 when diagnosed.

I'd been arrested in Central London for public order offences. I was therefore stressed held in Charing Cross Police Station. Duty solicitor turned up and an interview was to start. I kept ticing which then mostly was me pulling a sort of gurning face (still a regular one) and my shoulders shrugged repeatedly.

But with the stress the noise one started. I growled basically. I couldn't stop and it was getting worse. Interview starts and copper thinks I'm being troublesome. Luckily the duty solicitor says "Katy can you stop these things or not?". I said not and I was discharged on bail pending medical reports. Inside five minutes in a room with a doctor a few weeks later she says "Tourette Sydrome". I thought it was only the swearing and hitting yourself characters that had that.

Over the years using behaviour therapy and particularly after I stopped drinking it's much more manageable. My most noticeable tic now Is I jump. I've never got rid of that one at all since it started.

This week is the start of a very busy, stressful time at work. I'd had two weeks off but that was busy with personal matters. Into a big meeting I led on Tuesday with loads of folks I've never met. I'm essentially lining up my expectations for them during this period.

I'm at the front. Stood up presenting. The jumping starts to increase. Then the facial tic I have always had when stressed happens.

Meeting breaks. One of my staff ask if I'm OK. I say "I have Tourette's and this is stressful". She just said "Tell everyone".

Something that for years and years and years I've been ashamed of and she's so accepting and encouraging.

Meeting reconvenes. I stand up and immediately jump. I say "Just so you know I have Tourette's and when stressed my tics show up. That little jump is my most common one".

A guy at the front just started to clap followed by the entire room.

I was overwhelmed and cried.

Big, big, big moment for me.

So hello I'm Katy recovering alcoholic and addict that lives with Tourette Syndrome.

Oh BTW after that throughout that meeting a few jumps but no other tics at all. 😁
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Captain · 61-69, M
Tourettes, the best a man can get,,, Does this mean you talk dirty with a natural ease ??
samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
@Captain really?
Captain · 61-69, M
@samueltyler2 No but you can sing it
KatyO83 · 41-45, F
@Captain no that's the typical media representation of the condition because 5hat attracts clicks etc. But most vocal tics are non verbal like mine was. That one I've not suffered from for ages now.

Even verbal tics are often nonsense. The swearing is actually extremely rare in Tourette Syndrome suffers. The spitting is even rarer.
Captain · 61-69, M
@KatyO83 You live and learn - I only know what I know about Tourette from the speculation about Mozart…Spitting I’d never heard of. Someone at work would occasionally struggle to get his words out. I guess that’s the same thing… ish.
KatyO83 · 41-45, F
@Captain no that sounds like a stutter.

I see in your profile you are going to be teaching from September.

Can I make a suggestion as someone who's career is in education? Based on the above exchange on here I'd recommend you improve your understanding of neurodiversity and look at your default reactions and how they might be perceived by neurodiverse people.