'It feels like my brain is trying to be the class clown' - the reality of Tourette's
'It feels like my brain is trying to be the class clown' - the reality of Tourette's 6 hours ago Beth Roseand Alex Taylor Tourette's campaigner John Davidson, the inspiration behind the film I Swear, has made headlines around the world because of tics related to Tourette's syndrome. But what is the everyday reality of living with the often unpredictable condition? For 22-year-old Seren Jaye, her tics dictate whether she leaves the house or not. She experiences motor twitches, such as jaw jerks, vocal tics and coprolalia - involuntarily using obscene or offensive language - which she says can be "embarrassing" when she's in public. Silence or needing to be quiet is "really, really difficult", she says. "I can't go into a library. "Even if I'm having a day when my vocal tics aren't even that bad, going into a library will make them 10 times worse. "
The BBC has since apologised and launched a "fast-tracked investigation" into what happened.
Speaking in Parliament on Thursday, Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy described the broadcast of the slur as "completely unacceptable and harmful", saying the BBC "must ensure that this never happens again". "We all want to make sure that the Baftas and all of our award ceremonies can be inclusive places where people with Tourette's, who've been shut out of society for too long, can be fully included," she said.
"Anybody who's passing judgement on the situation needs to watch it first," she says. Speaking to the BBC Access All podcast the day after the film premiered in September, Davidson talked about seeing it in a cinema being a monumental occasion.
"That for me was just an amazing moment. "
Davidson described the emergence of a tic as a "gut-wrenching feeling in the middle of your stomach which slowly rises to your chest".
"And then suddenly, boom, the tic will appear," he said.
"It could be anything from a swear word to telling somebody they're beautiful.
I don't know what it's going to be. " Jaye says her tics have changed over time.
"I used to struggle with going past police cars," she says.
"In college, I was stopped because I ticked, 'I have drugs in my bag!'
when I passed a police car. I wasn't even holding a bag. The police officers were very amused by it. " Smith describes it as being like "intrusive thoughts" with "no malice, no hatred and it's uncontrollable", often in moments of high emotion such as when he is sad or happy.
He also struggles if he is meant to be quiet for a long time.
"Tourette's is not something that is as easy as telling your body not to do something because it does [it] without your permission anyway. "
"I'm saying that from being a black woman with Tourette's who has experienced racism with intent, and lives with Tourette's syndrome knowing the complexities of the disability," she said.
Jaye, a TikTokker who recently started working for Girl Guiding, says she sometimes tries to suppress or "mask" her tics for fear of coming across as unprofessional.
"It almost feels like my brain is trying to be the class clown. "
She says her current word tic is "chicken", which she says over and over again.
But tics are only part of the condition.
Smith, who's also the global ambassador for the Tourette Association of America, describes it as an "iceberg" condition.
"I'm constantly in pain. "
"We often have secondary disabilities that come along because of the effects of the Tourette's.
I get muscle strains all the time, I've got sore joints all the time with repeated tics. I get headaches an awful lot. Jaye says her tics tend to be accompanied by a "horrible feeling" that builds up in her back. She finds deep pressure, like weighted blankets, helps alleviate the sensation. Being around animals helps her too, she says.
"I had a rabbit and if I was playing with her my tics would really calm down," she says.
"Some people get that with babies as well. Your brain just sort of switches into a different mode and it overrides the tics. " When she is out and about and ticking, Seren says she personally finds people laughing along with her helps "ease the tension" if what she's doing is funny, like shouting "chicken". But if it's a simple tic, like whistling, then she says ignoring it is "the best thing" for her
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