How do you tell your friends and family that you are seriously ill? For me, it was made - strangely - somewhat easier by the fact that I had just emptied my bank account of ten thousand pounds and told my parents they were no longer invited to my wedding two weeks later.
Winston Churchill called it the 'Black Dog'. Every year, thousands of people in Britain die because of it. One in three people will suffer from it at some point in their life. Why, then, are we so afraid to talk about depression?
The problem is particularly striking amongst my own demographic, young men under the age of thirty. At this age, we're programmed to be strong and manly. We go out and swill beer, party until late and generally put out the alpha-male persona which is expected of us. Inside, though, hundreds of thousands of young males are battling against their inner demons and living through sheer hell.
Some women find it easy to talk - my wife certainly does, anyway. For most men, things are different. We walk it off. We battle on. We certainly don't want to bother our doctor when we're probably just feeling a bit down. Underneath our confident muscle-flexing exteriors, we men have a problem: we leave it too late.
Although I had been on some pretty hefty medication for two years beforehand, the culmination of events last summer meant that I had to tell my family and friends what I had been dealing with. Despite having enjoyed a preceding year which saw me release three number-one bestselling novels, bought my first house and planned my wedding, I was at the darkest point of my life. That's the nature of the beast: when things are bad, you deserve it. When things are good, it's even worse. Good things only happen because you're either lucky or a fraud.
When it finally all got too much for me, just two weeks before my wedding, I snapped at my parents and told them they were no longer invited. I can't even remember what set it off. I then logged into my online banking account and returned all of the money both sets of parents had kindly given us to help us with our wedding arrangements. The money wasn't even there - it would have bankrupted us, but I didn't care.
I also printed off and packaged up two copies of an extensive journal I had been keeping since my diagnosis with clinical depression in the summer of 2010, with the intention of giving them to both sets of parents as some sort of retrospective insight into what I had been dealing with. At that point, my intent was to kill myself.
Writing is a highly therapeutic process, but even that becomes an enormous chore when you are physically unable to get out of bed for days on end. One would imagine light relief would be given upon checking sales reports and and figures from my books. The figures were certainly hugely encouraging and the wonderful reviews and kind feedback were, of course, very nice. Inside, though, I still felt like more of a failure than ever.
It was at the pre-wedding breaking point that my wife decided that my family needed to know about my condition. Five months after, my journal had been packed out with narrative and commentary on what I had been battling throughout and released as We Need to Talk About Adam, a book which details my free-fall into severe depression, most of which was written whilst I was at the darkest depths of my battle. Through giving proceeds from this book to mental health charities, I hope to be able to give something back and - potentially - save a life. That would mean so much more than any sales report.
Follow Adam Croft on Twitter: www.twitter.com/adamcroft
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unlike you i try to talk about it whenever i perceive someone else with similar troubles. i think it helps people to deal with it knowing that others feel the same way.
very good luck to you, i hope it departs just as easily as it arrived.
I'm training as a freelance writer myself now and hope to be able to earn a living that way and say goodbye to the benefits system forever, but many others don't have the skills to just re-train like this, it is causing many suicides and premature deaths. In the future the true statistics for how many people died because of this governments flawed welfare reforms will be revealed, and the nation will hang it's head in shame that they let it happen.
Contrary to information coming from the popular press it does not cause mental problems. The USA, Israel, Portugal, Switzerland and the Netherlands are miles ahead of us in using cannabis to treat mental issues. it's worth investigating even if you have strong negative feelings about it. there are strains available today which are high in CBD and low in THC. CBD is an anti psychotic by the way.
whether you disagree with me or not, good luck to all of us - let's keep talking about it, i believe it helps most people to know that they're not alone.
I haven't 'topped myself' because of the aftermath which would surround the act.
My friends would be questioning, why?
My wife and son would be questioning, why?
Doctors would be questioning, why?
To everyone it would look like an act completely out of character and those questions could never be answered because it is MY secret. I've kept it so long and controlled it so well (controlled?) not one person suspects I am depressed. When I cry at happy endings (even in childrens movies) I am careful no-one sees it. When a happy event unfolds, I take great care to hide the tears welling up within me, ironically though... Sad events like bereavements etc. do NOT affect me to the point where I have been called callous and cold by some.
We can talk about depression as a generic illness, but it is far more complicated than that and is often 'tailor fitted' to the individual.
From my observation, depression (also) comes from being in an unsatisfactory situation and seeing no way out, because maybe there really isn't one, except to sit it out, which is hard. Day after day, night after night, the mind races how to find a way out of the unsatisfactory situation - but there's just no opening. The person then feels inadequate because he/she is apperently not steering his/her life properly - and after all, everything that happens to you is of your own making (or so the propaganda goes). Quite often there are elements that are not of your own making, but there are also your own mistakes. It's like a tangled ball of wool.
If the depressed person were asked in confidence, and be encouraged to be brutally honest, the reason(s) for the unsatisfactory situation could be uncovered. Rectifying is a different matter - and that's why we do not talk about depression, you can't get people a proper job, proper living conditions, closer to people they want to be closer to or further away from people they can't stand, or get them a dog or a cat when they cannot fund it or it's not allowed. You can't always get what they want, they sing. Some people survive better in unsatisfactory situation than others.
I know in my heart that I really need medication for this illness long-term, but still only use it when suicidal. Would NEVER leave my young kids with that legacy but, if I didn't have them ???
Can I just mention to sufferers that it is definitely worth having tests to check your thyroid function. Most are unaware what an important role the thyroid plays in regulating mood amongst other things. And because thyroid disorders often occur slowly over a number of years, sufferers may believe they are just becoming increasingly miserable / unhappy with life.
Some medical experts believe that thyroid disorders are more common than we know.
A failing thyroid is often coupled with symptoms of depression, tearfulness, insomnia, weight changes.... And it is no more than a blood test to eliminate a possible underlying cause.
There's usually one in a practice but first you have to identify that one, then place yourself in a long queue for appointments behind all the others who have identified him/her. He also manages to get a bad name among the other practitioners because the waiting room is always stuffed with people whose appointments are overdue - the doctor concerned is running late because he/she is listening to someone else - and targets are not being met!
If you finally hit on the right GP by chance, as I did, your life can be turned around - again, as mine was. Otherwise ...? The words 'battering' and 'brick wall' spring to mind.
Add to this - speaking as a woman - the fact that many men are far less likely to go 'whinging' to a doctor about anything, and the odds against getting the right treatment rise astronomically.
In desperation, maybe, a man creeps, shame-faced, into the surgery and mutters out a part of his problem - 5 minutes later, he shuffles out again, clutching a prescription for something totally inappropriate, and that's it! A woman may employ 'try and try again' tactics, earning herself the name of 'timewaster' as she does so, but - in my experience - there aren't many men with either the time or the neck to do the same thing. Is it any wonder the suicide rate is so much higher for men?
I can only speak for my own situation, in my NHS geographical area, where they offer various treatments depending on the patient's mental condition. My own depressions become severely clinical, and cannot be treated with CBT. Fortunately I was given ECT over a course of 8-10 sessions which followed by a selective cocktail of antidepressants stabilises me, and prevents me from becoming manic. That's a cocktail of 10 tablets a day. The attention and treatment I receive from my NHS Trust relative to mental health over the past 25 years is exemplary.
Fortunately my condition is now controlled and monitored. That's why I can only speak for myself on the subject. The brain has a thought process, and a mind of it's own.
It's good to write, or any other way of expressing to channel those thoughts & mental energy, one reason why you see quite a few blogs. I'm using reading, writing & art. There's not enough hours in the day...
So i after trying to hang myself, I went to my doctor and told him everything, he told me to take some pills which really screwed my head up, then told me he would get me the help i need asap.
A year on and still no help, cant take no more of the pills screwing up my head and the only thing that stopped me from stepping of the chair with the rope attached was the promise of help!!
I did ask my doctor, what do you put on the death certificate "waited to long for help" to which i got no answer.
so where do i go from here??????????????
when the NHS cant or wont do anything to help