She’s opening up! Yep, during a recent Instagram Live, Dixie D’Amelio addressed recent accusations that she “faked seizures” in high school to get out of class. The TikTok star denied the allegations and explained that during her sophomore year of high school, she suffered from severe anxiety, which led to Psychogenic Nonepileptic Seizures (PNS) — “attacks that may look like epileptic seizures but are not epileptic and instead are cause by psychological factors.”

Allegations about Dixie’s seizures first hit the web after Twitter account Def Noodles published screenshots of a DM conversation with someone who claimed they went to Dixie’s school. The messages alleged that the internet star would “randomly fake a seizure in the middle of class” and one of the teachers told the class that it was “annoying.”

After seeing this, Dixie started a livestream and shut down the allegations, calling the entire situation something “very, very personal” that she “would never want on the internet.”

“It’s just so dumb the things people say so they can take other people down,” the 19-year-old said, according to a screenrecording posted on the TikTok Room Instagram account.

Another clip from her livestream was posted to YouTube, which showed Dixie explaining her “very bad anxiety” during her sophomore year of high school and PNS diagnosis. She recounted the first time she had a seizure, which occurred after she felt “shaky and gross” all day. After a friend walked her to her mom’s car, Dixie remembered falling to the ground.

“Then, I’m taken to the hospital and I’m there for two days while they are constantly monitoring me and I have over 400 of these compulsions over the next few days,” she said.

After leaving the hospital, Dixie said she developed a stutter and was “shaking all the time.” After being on bed rest from April until September of that year, the social media influencer switched schools.

“I wanted to address this right away, because that’s something I don’t like talking about at all but I’m not going to let anyone think of me any other way,” Dixie said. “I was a person when I was at my old school who I did not like. I was not myself, because I had so much anxiety and everything going through my brain at the time where I couldn’t even have a proper conversation with anyone. I’m so thankful for who I am now and what I am and all that.”

Following the Instagram Live, she also took to Twitter and said that in the future, she wants to use her platform to open up about mental health.

“I’m fine now, but Imma use this opportunity to help spread awareness about some of the things I’ve been through because even though I don’t do it often, I think it’s important to talk about mental health,” she wrote.

If you or someone you know needs help, please call the National Youth Crisis Hotline at 1-800-448-4663.

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