The inferiority complex of epilepsy patients mainly comes from two aspects: one is the patients themselves, who will have a sense of self-imposed closure after having a seizure in public, believing that it is detrimental to their dignity and will cause ridicule and comments from others. In addition, because epilepsy is a chronic disease of the nervous system, it takes a long time to cure, and the disease will also seize during treatment, which makes some patients think that their treatment has failed and that their disease is incurable, resulting in despair and inferiority complex; on the other hand, the inferiority complex of epilepsy patients comes from society, because epileptic seizures have sudden and dramatic symptoms, which makes people who do not understand epilepsy This is one of the main reasons for people’s discrimination against epileptic patients, plus there are indeed some epileptic patients with mental retardation, and some patients have a psychotic-like state when they have seizures, so people often associate epileptic patients with fools and lunatics, which deepens people’s discrimination against epileptic patients. Seizures are not scary, what is scary is that the disease is treated unfairly by society. For these reasons, people with epilepsy often develop a strong inferiority complex, which seriously affects the treatment of epilepsy. The purpose of epilepsy treatment is not only to control seizures, but more importantly, to enable patients to live and grow physically and mentally healthy. To overcome the inferiority complex, it is important to first understand the basic knowledge of epilepsy to eliminate misconceptions about epilepsy. Epilepsy is a chronic seizure disorder, the seizures are short-lived, and after the seizure one is like a normal person, which will not affect normal life and work. Currently, the cure rate of epilepsy is high, and the development of modern medical technology has led to significant advances in the diagnosis and treatment of epilepsy. With the use of new antiepileptic drugs, the control of epilepsy rarely produces irreversible damage to the central nervous system. The mental retardation produced by seizures is temporary and reversible, and there is no scientific basis for equating epilepsy with mental retardation. Although epileptic seizures have symptoms similar to psychosis, they are only individual phenomena in psychomotor seizures and are episodic, and can return to normal after the seizure, while psychosis lasts for a long time, so epilepsy is not psychosis, and epileptic patients are not crazy. Secondly, the patient must establish a strong confidence in overcoming the disease. With the support of this belief, one can have to tell their friends, relatives, colleagues and classmates about their condition and tell them that epilepsy is only a seizure disorder and that it is no different from normal people after a seizure. In this way, they can get their help when the seizure occurs and also gain their understanding to eliminate their misconceptions about epilepsy. Finally, patients with epilepsy must often participate in normal social activities and fully demonstrate their talents in social activities, which will not only enable patients to enhance their social adaptability, but also help to develop their self-confidence.