Wednesday 10 October 2018

World Mental Health Day 2018

For years I tried to cope with my mental health on my own, hiding what I felt was some shameful flaw from those around me. I felt embarrassed. I felt ashamed. I felt as if it were my fault and I had done something to deserve this horrible bleak cloud that seemed to hang over me perpetually. It put me off reaching out and seeking help. It fed the demons I was fighting.

I first saught help 4 years ago. It is only really in the last 18 months or so that I've really opened up about my mental health. By no means am I cured, but I am getting better. There are times I slip but each time I am helped back to my feet by the wonderful people around me.

Dealing with your mental health can be a truly horrible experience.
Some days in life you'll feel crap. Some days will feel bleak and empty. Some days will leave you exhausted.

This is not a flaw on your part. This is not your fault. This is nothing to be ashamed of.

It's been said countless times in countless different ways but it doesn't make it any less true; it's ok not to be ok.

Don't be afraid to reach out. Don't be afraid to talk to someone or seek help. It might be one of the scariest things you'll ever do, but also one of the most worthwhile.

You got this.
Fuck it and fight it.

Sunday 2 September 2018

I am fucking sick of being mentally ill

I don't like moaning about my mental health but I need a rant.

Things appeared to be going alright for a while, and instead of enjoying I spent a lot of the time worrying, waiting for things to go wrong.

Well fuck me have they gone wrong.

I've burned myself out, big time. For the first time in my life I've been signed off. Things that aren't worth getting annoyed at enrage me beyond reason. There are external factors at work too but I can't do a lot to stop them. My anxiety and depression feel like they are through the roof at times.

I'm worrying that I'm falling into that same old pit I found myself in for almost two years. Some days I feel I'm in it, others like I'm circling it.

I'm fed up with being so irritable. With not finding enjoyment in old hobbies. With constantly feeling like I'm shite. I'm fed up with feeling like a crap friend, boyfriend, workmate etc. I'm fed up with feeling like I'm failing and can't prevent it. I'm fed up with feeling these things when deep down I know they're not true because unfortunately the voice reminding me of that fact is much quieter than the one telling me I'm shite.

I am fucking sick of being mentally ill.

Fuck it and fight it.

Friday 20 July 2018

One More Light

A year ago today I was starting to come out of one of the darkest chapters in my life in the wake of a severe depressive episode at the end if spring/start of summer. I was walking home from work and jumped into a takeaway at the foot of Leith Walk for my dinner. Whilst I was waiting for my food, I checked my phone and saw the awful news that Chester Bennington had passed away.

Whilst I wasn't what you would call a die-hard fan of Linkin Park, they were a band that you would find on every one of my CDs, mp3s, spotify playlists, whatever. The first CD I ever bought with my own pocket money was Hybrid Theory and it helped open up a world to me in which I met many wonderful people and made many friends I most likely wouldn't have otherwise met. Friends I still have to this day.

Their music and lyrics, particularly on Hybrid Theory, Meteora & Minutes To Midnight, helped me through the times when I thought my depression was just teenage angst and my anxiety was something that could be easily overcome. The emotion he put into his work resonated with me, and as I learned more about his past struggles the more I appreciated this.

I remember sitting in this takeaway, my mouth agog, scrolling through the internet trying to find something to say that this wasn't true. That it was some hideous rumour doing the rounds. That something had happened but he wasn't actually dead. It was only after a few hours that I began to accept it. I hadn't found it this difficult to accept the passing of other idols who had died by suicide, such as Robin Williams or Chris Cornell who had died a month or so prior to Chester. I had been saddened but I didn't go through this stage of denial. It hadn't hurt this much.

It was in the aftermath of Chester's passing that I decided to open up about my mental health. Hearing him talk about his battles and seeing how they had been a source of comfort to not just him but many others fighting those same demons, inspired me to talk about my own battles.

If you are feeling down or you are in a bad place, please talk to someone. Friends, family, a doctor, message me if you want to. If you're in the UK you can call Samaritans (116 123) or if you're in Scotland there is also Breathing Space (0800 83 85 87) if you want to talk to someone. The world can be a dark place. Your light makes it brighter for so many people.

Fuck it and fight it.

RIP Chester.

Friday 25 May 2018

Harry Potter and the Aorticstenosis

Don't ever let people stand in the way of your goals.

Only 2% of people over 65 get diagnosed with aortic stenosis.

I was diagnosed at 3. I couldn't be held back.

I'm taking a break from discussing my mental health (which is pretty decent just now) and instead shall tell you my story of living with aortic stenosis, going through open heart surgery, almost dying and my life afterwards.

(Spoiler: I survived)

As I said I was diagnosed at the age of 3. Apparently I had a really severe coughing fit and my parents were so concerned they called the doctor to come check me out (ah the 90s). The doctor was doing his thing with the stethoscope but was struggling a bit to determine what was wrong with me. When my parents enquired, he snapped with frustration, telling them he couldn't hear anything over the murmur.

Clearly "what murmur?" wasn't the response he was expecting.

I was diagnosed not long after, meaning that I've never really known a life other than one of regular hospital visits and check-ups. Aortic stenosis is a narrowing of the aortic valve. Most people with mild to moderate aortic stenosis do not have symptoms. Symptoms usually present in individuals with severe aortic stenosis, though they may occur in those with mild to moderate aortic stenosis as well. The three main symptoms of aortic stenosis are loss of consciousness, anginal chest pain and shortness of breath with activity or other symptoms of heart failure such as shortness of breath while lying flat, episodes of shortness of breath at night, or swollen legs and feet. As far as I can remember mine was mostly asymptomatic though I was prone to shortness of breath after activity, which I mostly thought was because I was chubby.

The main treatment for this condition is a valve replacement, and the decision was made to try and put off this procedure until my body was ready for the adult valve, so that I would only have to go through the procedure once.

It is testament to the strength of my parents and the wonderful work of the staff at Yorkhill Hospital that I went through most of my childhood without the foggiest idea of how serious the situation really was. I knew they were looking after my heart because there was something strange about it - there weren't any other kids at school whose parents picked them up at lunchtime once or twice a year to get their chest examined by doctors -  but was sheltered from the true severity of the situation, even after my first operation at the age of 11.

Because it is quite rare to have someone so young diagnosed with this condition, I would occasionally be brought in for student doctors to practice their craft on. This probably should have set off some kind of alarm bells, but I was being told to lie in bed rather than be at school and being paid in Malteasers and Irn Bru so I was too content to think much of it. I went that frequently that I picked up on key phrases being used, and on my last such visit at the age of about 10 blew the minds of some trainee doctors who were stuggling to diagnose me by telling them to "check for the thrill in the sub-sternal notch."

My first operation was a keyhole procedure at the age of 11. In hospital for 3 days then off school until after the Easter Holidays. This was essentially a procedure to buy some time so that the valve replacement could be put off. I had another such procedure at 13, just before school finished for the summer, but this one wasn't quite as successful. The big operation was going to have to happen sooner rather than later.

I came home from school one day in the August to find my mum home before me. This was rare, as both my parents were teachers at further away schools so usually I was the first one home. My dad wasn't far behind. It turned out it was a good news/bad news situation.

The good news was they'd got me tickets to see Franz Ferdinand that November (ah 2005). The bad news was operation was scheduled for the start of September.

A few days before the operation we went to a family friends 40th and I spent a lot of the night with my friends trying to sneak some cider. I didn't feel like I needed any major surgery at all, but there we were. 3 days later I was in Yorkhill being taken down to be knocked out and cut open. (Insert joke about typical Glasgow night out here)

I woke up staring at a neon light on the ceiling in intensive care hooked up to a plethora of paraphernalia. Wires were coming out my mouth, nose, neck and chest. The chest wires were the most obvious as they were below a big feckin wound that wasn't there when I last closed my eyes and attached to a big grey brick of an external pacemaker. After a while - I don't know if it was hours or days (ah fatigue and painkillers) - I was moved back up into a room in the ward.

All seemed well. For a day or so.

I started feeling ill. Wretching. Being sick until there was nothing left to bring up. The nurses were worried. Doctors were sent for. They too were worried. My mother was terrified. Machines were brought into my wee room. It turned out I had a build up of fluid around my heart and I needed to get my chest drained (similar to getting your stomach pumped only higher up and a bit more dangerous) but there was no free theatre in which to carry out the procedure. There was shouting, crying, frantic phonecalls; then a free theatre. I was rushed down and again woke up hours/days later looking at that neon light in intensive care, hooked up to a ton of machines.

It wasn't exactly "in the nick of time" but it was less than half an hour from game over.

In the following week I was fitted with an internal pacemaker (so long, brick) and started adjusting to life on new medication to help the valve and prevent  blood clots. I was finally sent home a week later.

It was the end of an incredibly  challenging chapter in my life. But it was far from the end of the story.

Since 2005 I've walked this strange line of not being sure if I'm disabled or not. I can still have a reasonably normal life but must take my medicine (warfarin, which is a type of rat poison) every evening from now until the day my heart stops beating.

It'll also be the day I escape from the ticking. As the valve opens and shuts, it makes a clicking noise. 95% of the time it's not a factor. The 5% of the time it can be a nightmare. An irritation I can't escape or control, usually only bothering me when I try to sleep at night or when I'm trying to relax in the bath. Once I hear it it's incredibly difficult to get away from it, to the extent that when I go to bed or for a bath I put background music on to try and cover it. It may sound benign, but there have been times when it's driven me so crazy I've wanted to rip the bastarding thing out of my chest just to escape the incessant ticking.

I have to go for regular check-ups to make sure my blood's ok. I need to go for annual pacemaker checks and get the valve checked every two years. Despite the fact I'm constantly being informed that my recovery is going better than expected I still get the fear that every appointment will be the one where they find some complication or anomaly.

I'd be lying if I said that I didn't think going through this had contributed to my mental health issues. Whilst I think I may have shown signs of anxiety beforehand it wasn't until a year or two after these procedures that I started to struggle. For a while I wasn't really sure how to cope with what I'd just been through. I introduced myself to people as a guy with a big scar. My MSN addy was scar-chest. For a while it felt like it was all I was. I think going for hospital check-ups where everyone else is in their autumn years (to be exceptionally polite, some must have been Victorian) kind of knocks how you view yourself. It doesn't help when you overhear them passing comments like "there's fuck all wrong with him."

Am I disabled or am I not? I'm honestly not sure.

The most recent issue I've had with it was moving to a new practice. After over a decade of having my blood checked by NHS Lanarkshire who were fantastic, I moved to Edinburgh. And so began 2 years (so far) of arguing. Whilst my dosage had previously been kept as stable as possible and the nurses used common sense should my blood be too thick or too thin, the second I moved my dosages were all over the place, changing weekly with the nurses totally reliant on some computer algorithm.

Not to say it's a bad system, but I find it difficult to trust something that tells me my blood's too thin then tells me to wait a few days to reduce the dosage. In Lanarkshire if it was out of range it was "increase/decrease one night, come back next week." In Edinburgh it's been either "increase/decrease in a few days, back next week" or a complete and utter shake up of my dosage altogether, meaning I've gone from check-ups every 4-6 weeks to every week. Luckily my employer has been very understanding, unlike previous ones who were more difficult to deal with.

This constant changing of my doses led to my blood being so thick that I required injections to rectify the situation. It stresses me out and makes me feel like I'm fighting some invisible war with myself. Quite like with my mental health in fact.

There are other wee irritating side-effects (no tattoos or piercings for example, which tbh I think my folks were a bit grateful for as they were worried I'd end up covered in them like Travis Barker or something) but they are just that; irritating. The whole situation is immensely irritating and I do sometimes find it difficult to not go "why me?" because I wouldn't wish this ordeal on my worst enemy and I'm genuinely fearful of passing it on to anybody else.

We all have our burdens to bear, I guess. This one is a heavy one. It's just my head and my heart that are fucked up. Who needs them anyway, right?

Fuck it and fight it.

Saturday 12 May 2018

1 Year

TW: suicidal thoughts

I have been humming and hawing about writing this blog entry but if I'm going to be open about my mental health there's no point half-arsing it.

On Sunday 20th May I'm taking my dad to a football match for his birthday. He has been incredibly supportive of me in dealing with my mental health and following the tragic death of Scott Hutchinson and the Coronation Street storyline surrounding the death of the character Aiden Connor he admitted to me that he worried about me. He then asked me a simple question; had I ever been suicidal.

It wasn't a difficult question yet it felt like it required a great deal of thought before answering, even though I think he already knew the answer. I knew he was telling me that he was scared. I knew no matter what answer I gave he would be scared, because he'd know that either he was right to be worried or that I didn't feel I could be honest with him.

I told him the truth. He asked when the last time was.

On 20th May 2017 I was coming to the end of a great holiday, having visited one of my closest friends in Malaga then met up with my sister in Brussels. The next night I was due to fly home. I'd spent the day at the Gay Pride Parade with my sister and it had been an absolute belter of a day. The whole trip had been a welcome break from a turbulent period of my life and I had thoroughly enjoyed it. The time came for my sister to head home so we said our goodbyes and she went to get her Metro home. As soon as she was out of sight I felt the heaviest of black clouds descend upon me.

There was no obvious trigger, nothing that brought it on. It was just there.

From this point on I'm going to be brutally honest about it so if you're not in the best place now might be a good time to stop reading.

I went for a drink. Didn't help. Thought I was just tired from a week of travelling around so I got some drink and went back to the hotel. The thoughts swirling round my head grew louder and louder until they became almost deafening. I punched and slapped myself. I was irritated. I was angry. Angry at myself. Angry because I knew what I was considering. Angry because in the preceding days I'd been given a very clear window into the consequences of doing this and knew what I'd be leaving in my wake. Yet I couldn't shake this most awful of thoughts. Thinking of how I was going to do it. Getting to the verge of it and then just catching myself before collapsing on to the floor, crying. I couldn't do it but I couldn't shake the thoughts. Eventually something would have to give.

I got a phone call from my ex which began to pull me out of this black hole. I then had a conversation with a recently bereaved old friend which finished the job. I don't speak to either of them any more but I will be forever grateful to them for what they did that night.

The next morning the cloud was gone, the thoughts were gone and the world seemed a lot brighter.
It was as if a tremendous storm had battered me during the night only to disappear into nothing after leaving its mark.

Over the next few weeks I began to open up to some friends about this evening. I couldn't bring myself to tell my family what happened, just that I'd got extremely low.

I'll never forget that night as long as I live. It was such a horrible, bleak and hopeless night and I can't remember ever being more scared. But in some ways I'm grateful for it. It makes me appreciate every wee adventure with my friends, every family event, every new friend, every new memory. Every daft wee text from someone I love texting me to say they heard a song that made them think about me. All could have never happened.

My family and friends mean the absolute world to me and I still get angry at myself for considering putting them through this. They pulled me out of my hole into somewhere a lot brighter. They opened up and let me know I wasn't alone in this fight. One of them gave me my mantra for this fight.

Fuck it and fight it.

It's been a year since I had my biggest battle with myself. I'm still standing. I'm still fighting. I won't stop fighting this coward of an illness. I've taken a battering but made it through the storm.

If you're feeling down or find yourself in a dark place please talk to someone. Please don't suffer in silence. Because the world is far better with you on it. You mean so much to so many people.

Bad times don't last. Don't let a dark cloud steal your shine. The storm will pass. It will get better.

Samaritans - 116 123
Breathing Space - 0800 83 85 87
C. A. L. M. - 0800 58 58 58

Wednesday 9 May 2018

Anniversary: The First Rant

It's been a year since first opened up about my mental health publicly on Facebook.

The catalyst for this was a tweet sent by that most charming of repugnant toads that is Piers Morgan in which Mr Morgan suggested that it was "utter nonsense" that 34 million adults in the UK were suffering from mental illness and that people should "man up."

The Mighty posted a wonderful article on this idiot's bile (https://themighty.com/2017/05/piers-morgan-tweets-man-up-mental-illness/?utm_source=Facebook&utm_medium=Mighty_MH_Page&utm_campaign=FBreg-MH&tmsignup=1&T=mhpage) which inspired me to open up. Because I had been trying to "man up" for years as my world began to crumble and fall around me before seeking help.

Fuck it and fight it.
____________________________

I'm sorry but a rant is coming.

I have been battling depression for a few years now, and I put off seeking help because I was trying to convince myself I was alright because all I needed to do was "man up."

Throughout this time I felt stupidly alone and isolated despite having some of the best friends anyone could ask for. It felt like for about a year and a half everything just stopped. Nothing would get better, no matter how hard I tried to "man up" I'd still be stuck in the same rut. It was only after I opened up to my friends and family and sought some help that things improved, and the love and support they gave meant far more than I could ever repay. For the first time in a long time I wasn't alone.

I know that Mr Morgan is as compassionate a person as Katie Hopkins or Voldemort, but the amount of people who suffer in silence because they expect to encounter this sort of attitude is horrible as is the toll it takes on them. Then again, I don't suppose it's surprising that such a loathsome man has such a loathsome attitude to the well-being of others.

If you feel low, don't man up, it doesn't help. Talk to someone. Being open with folk about your mental health is one of the scariest, bravest and best things you can do.

Monday 30 April 2018

NHS

Three times in my life I've saught help with my mental health through the NHS when I've found myself in bad places. Not just feeling sad or lethargic. Places that were so dark, bleak and scary the prospect of making it out seemed at times non-existent.

The first two times I was put on a waiting list and seen over three months after seeking help. The third I was just given contact details for private counselling (don't get me wrong, great if you can afford it) as I was apologetically informed by a GP that I essentially wasn't depressed enough to warrant treatment through the NHS according to the protocols and procedures they have in place.

I want to clarify that I am a massive supporter of the NHS - without it I almost certainly wouldn't be here today and am not sharing this story to have a go at the NHS. Rather the government and organisations that are strangling it.

Despite the amount of media attention and column inches dedicated to politicians tackling the "ticking time-bomb of mental health" as they often refer to it, the simple fact is this:

Not enough is being done. Far from it.

Someone's mental health and wellbeing should never be used as some political tool to steal votes with empty promises.  It should be treated with the same seriousness we treat physical health. But we are nowhere near that yet.

Thursday 26 April 2018

Rant in F Major

Not a mental health post, just a rant for a change.

I find myself seemingly in constant despair at the shambles of a world we live in. We lie to ourselves about how good things are when the world collapses around us.

We tell ourselves we've never had it so good as we turn our homes into hotel rooms and invite strangers in for an extra buck.

We tell ourselves things are getting better as we turn our cars into taxis to get some extra cash.

We delude ourselves into thinking we make a difference by changing a profile picture on a social media platform, or by signing a petition that will be read once then ignored.

We don't read up on the events that are happening around us. We let someone else do a biased job of it for us and form our half-arsed opinions based on that, then we wonder "why did Brexit happen? How did Trump win?"

We continue to sell our souls in pursuit of some vague idea of something that resembles our idea of happiness rather than making our own happiness, and have become so selfish as a society that we promote people who disregard the happiness and wellbeing of others unless it suits their agenda or puts money in their pockets.

Bill Hicks once said it's just a ride. We have forgotten that it's all just a ride. And we have forgotten that we have the power to change it any time we want. "It's only a choice. No effort, no work, no job, no savings of money. Just a simple choice, right now, between fear and love."

Hopefully once we are free from the vice grip of the selfish generation who hold the cards at the moment we will wake up and make that choice.

Hopefully we'll reject fear and choose love.

Tuesday 24 April 2018

Rabbie Burns, pals & reflections

I am not a connoisseur of poetry. I don't read anywhere near as much as I should. I am not a Rabbie Burns fanatic (despite crying when I found hewas dead when I was at nursery, roughly 199 years after his passing) but one ofhis lines is one that always stays with me.

 "O wad some Power the giftie gie us To see oursels as ithers see us!"

I wish I could see the side of me my friends and family see. I wish I could see the person they love, in spite of the meltdowns and the need for reassurance that at times must border on harassment. I wish I could see the person they want to hang out with, the one they want in their lives.

I know they don't see the me I see because I don't know if I'd be friends with him. They go out of their way to show me I'm loved and I'm not the person I see looking back from the mirror.  I am not my depression. I am not my anxiety. I am something so much more than that.

I am a brother, a son, a friend, a nephew, a cousin, a godfather and a warrior.

They let me see the me they love. Not the anxiety or the depression that distorts my vision. For this I am truly grateful. They show me the love they see in me and I love them for it.

Fuck it and fight it.

Friday 20 April 2018

Conversations

People can be properly morbid can't they?

Whenever someone dies suddenly or in unexplained circumstances the first thought among everyone appears to be "how did they die? Did they do themselves in?"

Look at the reactions to the recent deaths of Dolores O'Riordan and Dale Winton. Only after they've gone do people seem to en masse give a shit about their mental health.

It's easier to discuss the mental health of someone who's no longer here than that of someone who's living because there's nothing that can be done to help them. It's easier to discuss what could have been done than what can be done because it can be a fucking uncomfortable conversation. For someone who's never visited that black place it can be extremely difficult to even get a sense of how life is for someone who lives there and try to help them out of it.

But it's surely better having one tough conversation with someone as opposed to endless sad conversations about them.

If you know someone who's in that black place please talk to them. From my experience even the daftest wee conversation can make a massive difference to that person.

Love each other.
Fuck it and fight it.

Tackling My Mental Health: Anxiety, Depression & The Best Worst Year Of My Life

I first posted this on Vocal about 2 months ago but thought I might as well repost it here. Here's the link for the original if you're looking for more articles on similar topics. https://psyche.media/tackling-my-mental-health?_ga=2.32594494.1853401801.1524217330-143671639.1518982404 

2017 was a strange year for me. It should have been the worst year of my life. At points I thought it might be my last, yet it somehow managed to turn into one of the best years of my life.

I was diagnosed with anxiety and depression in 2014 after putting off my concerns for years thanks to a toxic relationship. I started talking to my closest friends and family about it, but for the most part kept it to myself for fear of being ostracized. It was like a permanent monkey on my back that I had to hide from everyone. But knowing my enemy made it easier to fight. I got a new job and a new girlfriend, and moved to Edinburgh.

Things seemed pretty sweet.


Then in March 2017, everything started to unravel. My girlfriend, who had helped me so much in my battles & I helped in hers, essentially broke up with me in stages. We tried an open relationship—I didn't really try, probably because I could sense what was coming—before she left me. Less than a month later, she was with someone else; someone she met in the dying days of our relationship.

Naturally, I wasn't in the best of places at this stage. Whilst I did have an incredible network of friends who could help me, they were now 40 miles away. I appreciate that it's hardly comparable to someone who has moved country and they were only about an hour away, but this was my first time experiencing a low so far from them, and I was wary of opening up to my Edinburgh friends to the same extent as my closest friends. A black cloud was gathering and everything was getting darker and darker.


In May I saw on social media that an old friend had lost her boyfriend and the father of her young child. Not knowing the circumstances, I offered my condolences. Her reply sent a chill running through me.

"Thanks so much. Hope you're holding up well please reach out for help if you need it because this could have maybe been prevented x"

I had had suicidal thoughts before, but they had been fleeting. I'd never considered the ramifications of it in any great detail before this. I had also thought naïvely thought that if I could have a family of my own, I'd be alright. There'd always be something or someone to fight for. For the first time, I realised that there was no magic-wand that could solve the problems in my head.


At the end of May, I visited one of my closest friends in Malaga, then my sister in Brussels. The time away did me good, up until my last night in Belgium. I said goodbye to my sister and she headed for the metro. As soon as she had gone, I felt some inexplicable force weighing me down, sucking the light from around me like a black hole. I went back to the hotel and tried to distract myself, but to no avail. I was agitated. I was beyond reason. Bad thoughts were swirling around my head, getting louder and louder with each passing moment. Two conversations prevented me from doing anything stupid that night; one with my ex-girlfriend, the other with my grieving friend. For that I'll always be grateful to them. It was one bad night, but it was a horrendously long and dark night.


When I returned home, I began to open up about my mental health. Not because I thought it would help anyone, just as a release for how I was feeling. The fear of being ostracized still loomed, but not as much as the fear of another night like that one in Brussels. I was met with such warmth and kindness that I felt like an ignoramus for keeping it all bottled up inside for so long. I found it just as helpful as any therapy session I'd been to in the past (In no way am I trying to undermine the benefits of therapy as a treatment, I just found it worked better in my case) and I found it easier to handle the black clouds when they gathered. My friends spoke to me about their struggles with similar issues. People I hadn't spoken to in years reached out to me, thanking me for doing something I thought was nothing.

I made a point of spending as much time with my closest friends and family as I possibly could. The summer of 2017 was probably the happiest I had been since I left high school. I identified things in my life I was unhappy with and started work on changing them. I'm still working on them today. 

I started off 2017 thinking of starting a family, thinking it would help save me. I ended it with a bigger and closer family than I ever dreamed of. A family I always had and who turned the worst year of my life into one of the best. A family who helped me save myself.

Wednesday 18 April 2018

My Mental Health Diary: Rut

From 18th April 2018.

So last few days I've been pretty down. Everything feels like it's getting on top of me. I'm stuck in a rut and as much as I try and tell myself it's only temporary I can't see any sign of things changing.

Every time I try to change things it fails so I don't see the point in trying therefore nothing changes so I stay stuck in my miserable wee hole that I've dug myself into. And whilst I'm stuck in this hole it allows things to fall on top of me and bury me. Things from bad things happening to good friends to just the world around me.
Whilst there are good positive things happening around me when I'm in this place they're drowned out by the negative. I feel myself becoming bitter and resentful and I don't like it. I don't feel that's who I am. I look at challenges and instead of facing them I internally go "what's the point?"

Things I previously viewed as achievements now feel like mistakes. Rather than trying to be my own person I feel I've walked a badly-drawn line between conforming to who people think I should be and who I am which has left me in some no man's land where I am neither. I tried to play someone else's game as myself and lost.

I know I can get out of this rut - I have done before - but I need a bit of time. Please bare with me. I'm trying not to lose myself.

Fuck it and fight it.

My Mental Health Diary: Go Compare

From 15th April 2018.

The last wee while I've found myself guilty of comparing my life to other people's.

It's an easy place to end up in. Even from childhood when we see someone with something shiny and cool we want a shot of it for ourselves. Only difference is that instead of wanting a shot of a toy or a ball or something it's usually aspects of their life. In my case when I'm not in the best place there's a hint of childish bitterness attached to the envy.

"How come they have that and I don't?"
"How is it fair that I have to deal with (X,Y,Z) but they don't?"
"How did they get that opportunity when I was overlooked?"

I hate it when I catch myself doing this because I know it's a dick thing ro do and it's utterly pointless. We're all individuals walking our own paths and yeah some paths are rockier than others. Some start off rocky but level out whilst others start level but deteriorate as time goes.

You can't ever truly see where someone else's path has been or has taken them unless you truly know that person. You won't know what struggles they've overcome or battles they fight in secret unless they open up to you. And in that case the last thing they need is an almost stranger acting like a jealous dick.

Fuck it and fight it. 🖤

My Mental Health Diary: Slip

From 10th April.

Once again I've slipped.

I apologise for going about it but depression and anxiety really are a relentless pair of bastards. Even once you've slipped they hide and sneak up on you. Sometimes they hit you with the melancholy and irritability that people associate with these pricks.
Other times they hit you with this horrible apathy towards everything and anything and you just do nothing. It's not that what you have to do isn't important, you just can't see the point in doing it. You can't see your accomplishments as being valid because they haven't made a big difference to the world. It's an awful part of dealing with the bastard that it can pull you to this place where nothing matters.

I'm in that place just now but don't plan on staying. I've spent too long there in the past and lost so much time and so many opportunities. I'm not going to let that happen again. I may have slipped but I'm getting back up.

Fuck it and fight it 🖤

My Mental Health Diary: Anniversary

Sunday will mark a year since I moved into my flat. To say it's been an eventful year would be an understatement.

It's featured breakups, relationships, fall outs, make ups and shake ups. It's featured incredible highs and eye-watering lows. It's featured mental breakdowns, health scares and the loss of some close friends.
It's been a year of changing my life. Changing the people I hang out with so that I'm not letting toxic people pollute my life. Changing my dietary habits and being a bit more sensible (he typed whilst having a donut). Changing my routine and finding out what those weird machines at the gym do.

Whilst there have been lows I've overcome them and they've made me stronger. The highs I've treasured every minute of.

It's been a year of redesigning, rebuilding and reclaiming. I don't plan on stopping.

Fuck it and fight it.

My Mental Health Diary: Down In A Hole

From 25th March 2018.

One of my favourite bands is Alice In Chains and one of my favourite songs is Down In A Hole.

Down in a hole and I don't know if I can be saved 
See my heart I decorate it like a grave 
You don't understand who they thought 
I was supposed to be 
Look at me now a man 
Who won't let himself be

The last wee while I've been down in a hole. Not the first time and won't be the last time. I've been in a rut, frustrated at a number of things - work, life, homesickness - and with little sign of improvement on the horizon it's worn me down a bit. Down in a hole and I don't know if I can be saved.

At times like this I find it too easy to look at what those around me have and wonder "why do they have that and not me?" which is stupid because I know that first of all I'm not going to solve anything bemoaning the good fortune of others and secondly I know that doing this is losing sight of the fact that we're all individuals walking our own roads and fighting our own battles. You don't understand who they thought I was supposed to be. Look at me know, a man who won't let himself be.
I've always liked this song because I've always related to it, every time I slip onto that dark corner of my own head. It serves as a reminder that I'm not the only one feeling this. In those lonely moment's I'm not alone. But unlike the song these days I'm often more positive about my mental health. Even when I'm in that bad place and I can't see light at the end of the tunnel I know that it will appear. The physical pain that manifests itself will fade in time. One of my favourite quotes by one of my least favourite people; "When you're going through hell, keep walking." Down in a hole, but I know I can be saved.

Fuck it and fight it.

My Mental Health Diary: Focus

I wouldn't say it's a regret but it is a fact. I spent so long chasing things that I thought adults should have that I made a number of bad decisions, mostly about people I let into my life.

I was too focused on what I thought I should have I missed wonderful little things on the periphery of my vision. I let the wrong people in and set myself up for fall after fall chasing things I thought I wanted.  It wasn't until I was almost 26 that I realised that I shouldn't focus on what I should have, started enjoying myself and my life more and focussing on things I want rather than what I thought I should have.

Sometimes the best way to find what we want is to stop searching and let it find us.

Fuck it and fight it. 🖤

My Mental Health Diary: The Third Man

From 6th March 2018.

“What makes a man, without hope, cling to a few more minutes of existence?” ― Graham Greene, The Third Man

This quote popped up on my Facebook earlier on, it seems to have become a bit more pertinent as the night has gone on.

As anyone who has been subjected to my recent posts can probably tell I'm not in the best of places just now headwise. I'm angry. I'm frustrated. I'm agitated. On a number if levels I'm done. Done with being so far from my family and my oldest friends. Done with living in a city I am not overly fond of. Done with being shat upon by those higher up than myself. "Oh it's a fact of life that you're shat upon." That doesn't mean you have to accept it.
Perhaps unsurprisingly given my shite mood and no sign of a change on the horizon I've fallen into a depression again. I felt it tonight lying in bed. I've felt it try to claw away at my chest like it used to and this time I've just laughed. Because I know I'm going to beat it. I beat it last year in far worse circumstances than this. Last year I was a man without hope, and I clung on. This year I don't just have hope, I have determination and a fire burning inside as well. And the love and support of some truly beautiful people. 🖤

What makes a man, without hope, cling to a few more minutes of existence? Love. Love for friends, love for family, love for the people that make our journeys worth it even in the torrential downpours.

Fuck it and fight it 🖕

My Mental Health Diary: This Fire Burns Always

From 10th February 2018.

2017 was not a good year for me, but it was the best worst year of my life.
In spite of what I went through, I felt like I had a fire inside that fuelled me to overcome any obstacles or doubts and chase what I wanted even if there was only the tiniest hope of getting it.

This year I haven't felt that. It feels like the fire is burning but not as brightly. I have been in a good place but lacked that spark that I had previously.

I know that not every day can be great and that this dullness is temporary but it's annoying because I don't know how to recapture that spark though I know I can.

Even through the darkest days, this fire burns, always.

I want to burn bright again.

Fuck it and fight it.

My Mental Health Diary: Selfish Bastards

From 31st January 2018.

I have spoken a lot about my depression and anxiety on here and have been met with a ridiculous amount of love and support.

One thing that I've been thinking about  is the selfish nature of these bastards. You get so wrapped up in yourself and your problems that you sometimes can't see things that are right in front of you and constantly seek reassurance for things that are blindingly obvious.

The love of friends and family, how loved you are, how much you mean to people. It's something that I know has been hard for some people closest to me, people who offer unconditional and unwavering love only to have me seek reassurance that it's there. It has been a source of great frustration to them and for that I apologise. The last thing I have ever wanted to do was cause any sadness or frustration because of my own issues.
I also say to them a massive thank you for standing by me through these bad times. Their love and support means the entire world to me and I cannot thank them enough. With their help I am in a better place than I thought possible almost a year ago.

Fuck it and fight it ❤

My Mental Health Diary: Thank You

From 30th January.

I realised that I haven't posted about my head in a while and that I only seem to talk about it when I'm down or in a bad place.
A bonus (for lack of a better word) of having these bad times is that it makes you appreciate the good times even more. When I've been down in the past I've focused on the negatives in my life. What's gone wrong, what I don't have etc. For too long it's been like that. There's a song I like that talks about people having two wolves inside of them - one good, one evil - and the dominant wolf is simply the one you feed. For too long I fed the evil one.

After a rocky start to this year I'm in a good place. Instead of the negatives I'm focusing on the positives. Even the worst and darkest of places there's a light and a route to better days.
These are just some of the folk who have surrounded me with positivity whilst I've been such a negative prick, and for that I thank you all. ❤

My Mental Health Diary: 40 Years

I went to a uni open day last week and attended a lecture about teaching in which the lecturer made a point about this being "your job for the next forty years." This scared me somewhat.

Not the prospect of teaching for 40 years - teachers do remarkable things and help shape so many lives - but the prospect of being tied to anything for that length of time.

Obviously if you've always wanted to be a teacher then that's marvellous. Same for any job you've always wanted - nurse, chemist, artist, whatever. I don't fall into that category. There hasn't ever really been one job I've wanted since day one but I'm at an age where I realise I need to sort my career out.

I'm not quite ready to give 40 years to settle for something I don't particularly want to do. For now I'm looking for what I do want to do.

My Mental Health Diary: Oxymoron

From 18th January 2018.

The first fortnight of this year has been weird.

I've spent a lot of time with some close friends and family and been surrounded by love and positivity. I've been down but not negative, which I know sounds like an oxymoron.
I've been able to accept that there are times when I'll be down for no obvious reason and that the best way to deal with that is with positivity. Because things will get better. The negative moments, the down days, they're just temporary. Shite, yes, but temporary.

Sooner or later things will pick up. I'm lucky enough to be surrounded with amazing people who help to fill my life with warmth and positivity. Who save me from falling back into that hole. Who remind me that life has it's ups and downs. If you fall down you have to hit the ground before you can get back up.

Fall down 7 times, get up 8.

Fuck it and fight it.
Martin x

My Mental Health Diary: Old Friend

I had a conversation with a friend I hadn't spoken to in years and realised just how much of the last 10-13 years of my life I've allowed to be dominated by negativity.

I haven't got a good relationship or kids or anything like that. I'm not working in some amazing dream job. I haven't travelled the world or swam with dolphins or helped some poor village build a new well or any of that. I haven't done this or that or the next thing blah blah fecking blah.

No wonder I'm a miserable dick if all I do is focus on negative things. Things that I can still do if I want.

I started thinking of the positive things I've done through this time period instead. Recovering from open heart surgery. Getting into uni. Graduating from uni with Honours. Picking myself up after bad relationships and fall-outs. Tackling my mental health. Losing 3.5 stone. Taking opportunities to create memories such as working at the Commonwealth Games in 2014 or being pitch-side to see my favourite team beat the best team in the world. Making great memories with awesome people. Pushing myself to do things I didn't think I could.

It's so easy to be negative, especially if you're feeling down. Take a second and think about all the amazing things that have happened in your life and be positive about yourself. Everything you haven't achieved yet is still there for you to seize.

You got this. X

Fuck it and fight it.

My Mental Health Diary: Attack

From 11th January 2018.

So something happened to me today that hasn't happened in a long time. (Quit snickering up the back.) I had an anxiety attack at work earlier on today, the first time it's happened in months, maybe even years. It was just a mild one and I was able to get a grip of it quickly enough so I could still do my job without anyone noticing (I think), but it still happened.

Initially I felt embarrassed and annoyed at myself because I knew I was getting myself wound up over nothing and I had gone for so long without one. I confided in some close friends who reminded me it's nothing to be embarrassed or ashamed of. It happened and at the end of it I'm still standing. I may have depression and anxiety but they'll never have me.
I am not my depression or my anxiety. I am something stronger than anything they can throw at me.

Fuck it and fight it.

My Mental Health Diary: Sorry

From 7th January 2018.

I'm frequently told by my friends that I apologise too much, for which I usually apologise.

Unfortunately I am not James McAvoy in Wanted so considering that chances are Angelina Jolie and Morgan Freeman won't help me get my shit together so I try and do it myself. All my shit. So it's together.

When my friends tell me to stop saying sorry they say that I've nothing to apologise for. And the truth is I kinda know it. I'm lucky enough to have some of the kindest, understanding, wonderful people as friends and I know that if I fall back down they just want to help me back up again. No apology necessary. No scores being kept. Just love between friends. And it goes both ways. Just wanting to see each other shine as bright as they can.

So why the hell am I saying sorry?

What am I sorry for? For being down? It happens to the best of us and they all know that. I know they know that because they've told me often enough. So it's not that. It doesn't make me a failure, I haven't let anyone down and haven't hurt anyone so it's not those.

If you're down you don't have to apologise for it. Don't apologise for being in a battle. Fight back instead, the odds are you'll always have a friend or 6 in your corner, willing you on to beat the bastard.

I hope this rant makes some sense. If it doesn't I'm not saying sorry.

#fuckitandfightit

My Mental Health Diary: New Year's Eve

From 31st December 2017.

This time last year I was full of optimism and felt that I was within touching difference of everything I ever wanted. That didn't quite work out.

2017 has given me a battering. There's been highs, crushing lows and a few bad wobbles for lack of a better word. At times it's felt like getting my life back on track was like trying to turn water into wine. It's been a year of missed opportunities, hard luck and harsh lessons.

I'm coming out the other end of this year stronger and hopefully a better person. I'm surrounded by the best people anyone could ask for and honestly cannot thank them enough for helping me through this year. ❤

2018. Bring it on.

My Mental Health Diary: 2017

This has been a tough year.

I've gone from insane highs to terrifying lows almost as if it was controlled by the flick of a switch. I've gone from having a great day to being a wreck in no time at all.

I've had people who were so close to me and told me they loved me and how much I meant to them turn around and drop me like I was a bad habit. Like I was nothing to them.

I've also discovered who really cares about me. I've learned more about myself and the bastard that I'm fighting and pushed myself to be open about it. I've surrounded myself with some of the most wonderful people on the planet and stopped caring as much about what other people think. Ifeel that I'm coming out of the year as a better and stronger person. Battered and bloodied but still breathing. ☺

Fuck it and fight it

My Mental Health Diary: Other People

From 12th December 2017.

Part of my depression has always been comparing my situation to other people's, no matter how ludicrous the context is. Feeling like I should be where they are and it's a failure on my part that I'm not, or that I don't have the right to feel down compared to them because x, y & z happened etc and they're holding it together better than I am when the truth is everyone is an iceberg and we usually only see the tip.

Always wondering how folk can hold it together and do alright when the truth is that everything around us is just happening and we're all making it up as we go along. 🙃

Fuck it and fight it.

My Mental Health Diary: #PassTheBadge

From 20th November 2017.

I post a lot about my mental health now, something that I was wary of doing for a long time.
For years I put off acknowledging the issues I had regarding my mental health, a situation not helped by listening to the wrong people and not knowing how to speak about it for fear of being looked at as a freak. Other health issues made me feel out of place enough as it was.

For the record, dumbest decision I have ever made. And I have made some pretty dumb decisions.

Talking to my family and friends about what's going on in my head has lifted an enormous weight. Being open about my mental health has made it easier to fight. The cruellest trick it plays is trying to convince you that you're alone. That is the last thing you are. Talking about what's going on between your ears shows you this.

If you're down talk to someone. Friends family, fuck it message me if you want. Call Samaritans (116 123) or Breathing Space (0800 83 85 87). Just talk to someone, it makes it easier to fight back.

Fuck it and fight it
#passthebadge @seemescotland #starttalking #mentalhealth

My Mental Health Diary: Pacemaker Check

From 15th November 2017.

Chilling before my pacemaker check-up because I'm Ironman on a budget. Irnman if you will.

I've been going for these check-up for 12 years now and even though I've never had any problems with it - one minor scare at a pals birthday aside - I usually find myself worrying that this'll be the time I get told that something's wrong. Even though year after year, check-up after check-up I'm told that I'm doing much better than expected in terms of my recovery and quality of life, that wee catastrophic part of my head tells me this'll be the time I get bad news.

This morning I'm telling it to shut up. 🙃

Fuck it and fight it

My Mental Health Diary: Seasonal Hours

From 10th November 2017.

My job has seasonal hours, so I work less between November and March.

Last year this felt great, an opportunity to fit more into my days, hang out with friends and wind down after a hectic summer. At least it seemed hectic at the time.

This year I feel constantly shattered. So much happened this year and I was able to sort of distract myself from it with how hectic work was amongst other things. Now that the foot's come off the gas so to speak it feels like it's caught up with me at once. Break-ups, breakdowns, homesickness and arguing with doctors about my heart medicine, it fair takes it out of you.

Apologies if I don't seem like myself just now. I'm just tired. I will get better.

Fuck it and fight it.

My mental health diary: catching myself

From 24th October 2017.

I've said before that I think that one of the worst things about depression is catching yourself sinking. The only thing I think is worse is catching yourself having thoughts that you know are wrong and nonsensical.

Catching yourself thinking that you are alone and nobody cares when you know people do care so much and you are not alone.

Catching yourself feeling like a failure when you know you've overcome so much to get to where you are.

Catching yourself feeling like a burden to those around you when you know you're surrounded by unconditional love.

Then the guilt that comes with catching yourself having these horrible thoughts. The worry that you're driving people away. The fear that you're losing everything.

It's not your fault.

It's the biggest trick the cowardly bastard has in its arsenal. If you can get past it once you can do it again and again. It won't make it hurt less at the time, but it can be overcome.

I will overcome it again.

My mental health diary: Temple

From 20th October 2017.

"If my body is a temple, tell me why it hurts like hell?

12 years ago I had 3 heart operations in just over a week. The second one was an emergency procedure. My body reacted badly to the first operation - I can't remember why exactly - and I developed a build-up of fluid in my chest. I felt like I was drowning whilst lying in a hospital bed. I was in a bad way. Doctors and nurses were running around frantically. The worry was etched all over my parent's faces. I later found out that I was less than half an hour away from my journey reaching a premature end.

I survived.

When my depression hits it feels like a ton weight trapped in my chest. It hurts, like a massive claw gripping my heart from the inside. It reminds me of that day. It also reminds me of what I've overcome to get to where I am now. It reminds me that I survived the real thing and that I'm more than a match for whatever this bastard can throw at me. Because it's a coward.

Fuck it and fight it. My body is a temple. My head is too.

Fuck it and fight it: my mental health diary

From 19th October 2017

The worst thing I have found about depression is the moment you catch yourself falling into a funk.

The last wee while things have been great. I've spent a lot of time with my closest friends, made new friends and some fantastic memories. My life has been enrichened by a ridiculous amount of love and I've been a better person for it.

Today I've gone out to the shops, come back and sat on my bed and caught myself slipping. And it's a horrible feeling because there has been nothing to cause it. It's just happening. And I know I'll pull myself out of this wee funk soon enough. I've done it before and I'll do it again. To quote one of my closest friends "fuck it & fight it." My life is so much better than it was when I first realised I was fighting this bastard and it is full of utterly wonderful people who have helped me immeasurably. So every time this bastard turns up I know I can beat it.

Everyone who has helped me, thank you. From the bottom of my heart thank you so much. And to anyone who is suffering, talk to someone. Friends, family, a doctor or message me if you want. Alternatively there's a couple of phone numbers at the end of this rant.

Don't suffer in silence, because you're not alone.

Samaritans - 116 123
Breathing Space - 0800 83 85 87

#depression #fightbackmentalhealth