Reclaiming Life with Epilepsy and Invisible Illness with Dance Therapist Christine Cooper‑Smith



A single grand mal seizure at 13 changed the entire direction of Christine Cooper-Smith’s life, abruptly ending her dancing ambitions and forcing her to leave school. What followed was a deeply personal battle with the unseen realities of epilepsy — fear, stigma, anxiety, depression, and the constant uncertainty of losing control in public. Christine breaks down what epilepsy really is in everyday language while sharing how triggers like heat, humidity, alcohol, caffeine, and flickering lights affect the choices she makes each day. She also highlights the importance of boundaries, self-awareness, and honest communication when navigating life with an invisible illness. Rather than allowing her diagnosis to define her, Christine transformed profound loss into a new sense of purpose, becoming a dance therapist and mentor who helps others with chronic conditions rebuild confidence, rediscover their worth, and pursue lives filled with meaning beyond their limitations.

Christine Cooper-Smith was pulled out of school as a young teenager after a grand mal (tonic-clonic) seizure ended her dream of becoming a professional dancer, yet despite being told her future was over, she went on to become a university graduate, dance therapist, and mentor, helping people with invisible illnesses reclaim confidence and independence. A co-author of Stories of Strength: Real Journeys of Struggle, Resilience, and Renewal alongside Pat Mesiti, Christine focuses on the emotional and social side of disability, teaching others how to navigate boundaries, communicate their needs, and rebuild a meaningful life beyond diagnosis.

Resources:

Cooper Smith Stories of Strength

Talking Points

00:00–01:35 From losing her dream of becoming a professional dancer at 13 to becoming a university-trained dance therapist

02:28–04:15 What epilepsy really is and why the emotional impact can be more disabling than the seizures

04:45–05:42 The hidden burden of feeling like a “burden”: isolation, depression, and learning  to communicate your needs

08:16–09:23 Triggers, boundaries, and everyday risks from alcohol and caffeine to  flashing lights and extreme heat