Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder

prememenustrual-dysphoric-disorder-and-post-menopausal-syndrome

Today’s blog features Angela who is a blogger from Scotland. Angela tells us about her struggles with Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder which she suffers from during her monthly cycle.

I was diagnosed in 2014 with Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder which is linked to my monthly cycle.

The condition causes both physical and psychological symptoms that affect daily life. Doctors say it is rare, but I don’t believe that is the case.

Before my diagnosis I was told it was just “normal anxiety” and the relationship with my husband almost fell apart, I missed out on days out with my children during 2014 as I was too scared to leave the house.

I hardly saw my friends, but at the same time, I was lucky that everyone was there for me.

I haven’t worked since 2013 but, I hope to get back to work soon. I am currently studying for a health and social care degree at Open University, and I also write my own blog.

I have submitted a petition to the Scottish Parliament asking them for better access to psychological services across Scotland, and the outcome of the inquiries has been used to form Scotland’s new mental health strategy.

To find out more about Angela’s campaign check out her story in the Cumbernauld News.

Physical Symptoms
bloating
abdominal pain
headaches
backache
muscle and joint pain
breast pain
trouble sleeping
feeling sick

Psychological Symptoms
the feeling of being hopeless
anxiousness
irritability
oversleeping or not sleeping at all
lack of interest in favourite activities
no motivation
no energy
problems concentrating or focusing
feeling overwhelmed
a severe manifestation of physical symptoms (as above)
Suicidal thoughts

If you suffer from Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder or you recognise some of the above symptoms in yourself go and check out Angela’s Mental Health Blog, comment below or join in the discussions on our social media pages.
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Kim’s story from a BPD Solution Seeker

diagnosed with BPD

 

This is from a BPD Solution seeker

I was relieved to be diagnosed with BPD after years of pain and suffering.

Hi I haven’t written anything like this before so was a bit nervous about it and got myself into a panic thinking I need to sound intelligent and how I need to word my story then I thought f@@k it !!!

Don’t try to be anything just share my experience then I can’t go wrong, so I am starting to write this as it comes and let whatever come out as. There won’t be any fancy words or quotes just whatever is from me.

So here goes … My name is Kim. I’m a 36-year-old female, and I have been diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder.

I have suffered from my mental health as far back as I can remember. My early memories of childhood still to this day pain me, not understanding the emotions I was feeling, not understanding this world I feel I have been placed in by mistake.

Feeling completely lost, alone, and stuck.

I can remember being of primary school age, sitting on a swing in the park for hours just staring up at the sky and feeling complete confusion.

Wondering who I am?

Wondering about this world around me and feeling like I don’t belong. While the other kids of my age are all playing together, playing games, laughing and smiling and I’m just thinking, I can’t do that. I can’t do this. I just want to leave.

Please take me away from here.

I thought I was the only person in this world to feel the things I felt. Everyone else seemed to appear normal.

When I say normal, I mean interacting with each other, doing normal things, being children.

Not being messed up in the way I was.

I spent my childhood in the darkness in a world I didn’t understand.

Why was I here?

What was so wrong with me? I just didn’t know.

I’m not sure if it is trauma that caused my BPD.

I do know I have a brother who is seven years younger than me and he is a balanced human being who lives a balanced life. (he’s the golden boy of the family.

He doesn’t suffer in pain.

My mum used to say, how come your brother turned out ok?

I don’t have an answer for that.

Maybe because of the age difference or maybe he didn’t see the things I saw as a child as he was younger?

The violence within my family home I know damaged me and many more traumatic experiences to follow.

By the age of 13, I was completely out of control and ended up in a children’s home because my mum just couldn’t cope with it.

She didn’t understand what was wrong with me and neither did I.

I was lashing out by that time and causing many problems my mum had tried many things, but in the end, the last resort was the children’s home, and that finally came.

For years after that, I hated my mum and blamed her for everything.

I started a long battle with drug addiction because

I couldn’t bare this world, so I used one substance after another to take away the pain I felt inside.

I felt unloved. I felt unwanted. I felt like a bad person.

I hated myself, and I hated the world around me.

I believed I was a monster. Some nights I would pull my hair so hard bits would come out, and I’d scream into my pillow just to try to get rid of the hurt.

I didn’t trust people either.

I was always on edge and paranoid and still can be like that today.

I would come up with a million and one scenarios in my head to what people were up to or what they were going to try to do to me.

Sometimes might I just add I was right and things I thought would happen would happen?

I had to protect myself. Protect myself from everyone so no one could hurt me.

I used drugs that made me high one minute the next I was on drugs that took me right out of it.

Which I craved more and more because at first they removed all the pain but it never lasted eventually the pain would always return.

I went from blaming my mum for the way I was to blaming the drugs to blaming any partners I was with at the time. I had two kids along the way.

Jeez, I couldn’t even look after myself.

What the hell was I thinking?

What was wrong with me?

Even though I always put the blame elsewhere, there was a part of me inside that knew deep within that there was something else wrong with me. I just didn’t know what.

I spent my life up until ten years ago on and off drugs to the point there were no more drugs to try.

Every drug I had used till it didn’t work anymore.

I had no choice but to come off them.

I had gone from one broken relationship to another.

Now I was on my own.

I was homeless at the time.

My kids were removed from me, and they had to stay with other family members until I got clean.

After a long battle, I got clean.

I thought right let’s get myself together.

Got off the drugs, Got my kids back, got a job, etc.

I wanted to try and rebuild my life again but how could I rebuild it when I didn’t have any solid ground in the first place?

I didn’t know that so yeah I got off the drugs and the drink which was another avenue I exhausted.

In the time spent in the fellowship, I worked on a 12 step programme which involves meditating and praying, having a sponsor, and helping others come off drugs.

If you follow this programme you are told you will live a life beyond your wildest dreams.

I was doing everything I was told.

I got clean, got my kids back, and got a flat and a job.

I was looking great and even purchased a car.

So wasn’t that all I needed to do?

I was still in pain the only difference this time I wasn’t on drugs. I had all the outside stuff which was the first time in my life I had that.

Everything from outside looked great, but I still felt this pain within.

Feeling like a child sitting in the park on the swing staring up at the sky. In all these years what had changed?

I was still confused. I still didn’t know who I was. In fact, I was even more confused because now I was pushing myself into the world.

Trying things I hadn’t done before.

And yes at times I experienced laughter and fun and can do on some days even now I find this confusing.

How can I feel happy one minute then the next minute feel so sad?

Then I think was I even feeling happy at all?

Was it real? I don’t know? It’s so confusing.

I went from feeling loads of confidence like feeling pretty funny and intelligent and able to having no confidence at all.

Feeling so ugly that I can’t Evan go out the door as if people look at me they will see my horrible monster face and see how stupid I am.

I actually thought at one point that I had bipolar as I can go from one extreme to another.

I go from laughing to crying tears running down my face.

I go from feeling completely secure and loved to insecure and unloved.

I can think my partner is the best thing in the world to the worst person I know. It’s crazy.

There no in between.

Please, someone, let me out of here!!!!

I made a decision over a year ago to leave the fellowship because something wasn’t right.

I was doing everything and still having suicidal thoughts and hallucinations at night.

Leaving the fellowship was hard because I was scared as I thought if I leave I will have nothing to fall back on.

By doing that it led to more pain which led me to my diagnosis.

I was cutting myself and taking overdoses.

What now?

In turmoil with my new relationship destroying that.

My partner says at times he feels like he’s in a relationship with a heavy emotional weight!!

I cut myself to stop the pain.

I try to kill myself because I can’t cope in this world.

I was reluctant to go to the doctors because I had been there before and they had prescribed anti-depressants which at that time didn’t help me, so I thought what’s the point, but my mum encouraged me to go back.

So I did, and I begged them to help me.

I told them I want to kill myself and I can’t cope with all these emotions.

This anxiety, the paranoia, and the insecurity.

The pain I am feeling and the pain I am causing others. Please make it stop I asked them.

They referred me right away into the mental health clinic where a crisis team started the process.

I don’t want to hurt my family by taking my life away but is it possible for me to be here in any way and not suffer?

After a couple of months of visiting the mental health team through the NHS, I was given a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder.

Right away I was right onto Google 24/7 reading everything about BPD.

For the first time in my life, some things started making a bit of sense.

Part of me felt relieved, and I couldn’t believe there were actually other people with BPD.

I then went on to stalk them all online!!

I was like are you like me hehe. People actually feel what I do? It was so strange.

I went through a period of feeling relieved one minute to feeling like right

I am a loony the next minute to thinking maybe they got it wrong they made a mistake, and there is no name for what I have.

Maybe I’m just f@@ked up!!! There no cure.

I was given a booklet by my key worker at the clinic about being diagnosed with BPD.

There was information in it about DBT which is dialectical behaviour therapy.

Dialectical therapy is proven through studies to be one of the most effective treatments for BPD.

I was also giving a CD to practice breathing techniques.

I attended my next appointment at the clinic and of course asked about the DPD treatment on which I got no response from my worker.

Feeling confused then I started feeling stupid.

Thinking maybe I read the booklet wrongly.

But I went home and reread it again and yeah there it was.

DBT therapy is available on the NHS for borderline personality disorder.

I have been trying to pursue this with the clinic, but eight months later I am still no further forward with getting any therapy.

I did get put on Sertraline medication 100g it has brought my anxiety down a bit.

But the suicide thoughts are still there, and I even took an overdose of my Sertraline to kill myself which only led to a horrible experience in the hospital.

I was unwell with the overdose but still alive!!!

Is there no escaping this world I thought?

I have a 24-hour number I can ring if I feel suicidal.

Sometimes it has helped depending on who answers the phone.

I once had a guy on the phone telling me can’t I just stick the TV on and how tired he was as it been a busy night with calls.

I didn’t have to phone back after a long time because I felt what’s the point in speaking to them.

I have been online and on the Linehan institution website.

As they are the ones who founded DBT but when it asks to put in my postcode, it just says no clinicians available where I live.

I have tried to access the treatment privately, but the costs are so much that I really would need to win the lottery to pay for it which I’m currently trying to do!!!

I do go online and get bits of DBT workbooks etc.

It’s kind of hard doing it yourself as my thinking can be distorted at times, so I really need to work it through with a professional.

I’ve stopped going to the clinic as they just want to keep upping my medication and adding other more.

I’m still having suicidal thoughts.

I still can’t cope in this world. There are times I enjoy things but the downtimes are killing me.

I don’t have any friendships outside my family as I don’t know how to.

On Mother’s Day, I booked a table for dinner for my mum, my partner, and his mum.

On the Friday I booked this, and on the Saturday morning, I was great.

Then came the Saturday night came and something changed within me.

My belly started turning, my emotions all started building up then exploding by the time Sunday came I couldn’t move.

I lay in bed for hours just lying there. Every time I have any meltdowns, this is what happens to me afterwards.

I can’t eat.

I can’t do anything but lie there just staring into space. Then the days to follow I’m filled with guilt and shame of letting my mum down.

At times I feel like I’m losing hope.

I know that if I don’t get therapy, I will take my life. If that day comes, I hope my family can try to understand that being here was too painful for me.

I want to access therapy I want to get better, but if not I can’t go on anymore like this.

This is not a life for anyone. I love my children.

My partner, my Mum, my Dad, and my brother, and I even have a beautiful seven-month-old granddaughter and my two dogs of course.

I’m so in love with them. I really don’t want to hurt them more.

When you battle mental illness, it becomes exhausting, and it affects everything and everyone around you.

DBT is proven to be the most effective treatment for BPD, and yet I can’t seem to access it?

Thanks for reading.

If you have any questions about Kim’s story, please comment below or join in the discussions on our social media pages.

My friend with Schizophrenia

Schizophrenia meaning

My childhood best friend was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia, and he committed a brutal murder.

I remained in touch with him and spoke to him on a regular basis and visited him in the mental institution.

I was shocked to find out that for a long time I was the only one who spoke to him apart from his father.

I faced a lot of criticism for staying in touch.

People couldn’t understand why I wanted to talk to him after what he had done; I became ‘the one who is friends with a murderer’.

But he was my friend for so long I couldn’t not talk to him and find out why it came to the murder.

He had suffered in silence for most of his life.

And what I had dismissed as shyness and depression was in fact voices only he could hear.

I wrote a book about it ‘Solacium’.

I initially wrote the story down as a way of self-therapy to deal with the shock and insomnia I developed as a consequence, but I now feel I owe it to my friend to make his struggle known.

I hope my book not only provides a glimpse into the tortured mind of a paranoid schizophrenic but also manages to portray him from a different angle than the one chosen by the media at the time.

Not a crazed, bloodthirsty monster but a sensitive boy who was dealt the wrong cards and battled his whole life to find a place in a society that still stigmatises mental illness.

According to recent studies, a quarter of the population in the UK is likely to develop some form of mental health problem over the course of a year.

And with the NHS continuously cutting funding into the health support sector, I believe it is important to raise awareness and foster better understanding to ultimately provide better care to those who suffer.

Here’s the link to the book.

By Sarah

Please feel free to comment below, email some questions across, and join in the discussions on our social media pages.

My experience with Tuberous Sclerosis

Tuberous Sclerosis

I was surprised when I was diagnosed with Tuberous Sclerosis aged 13.

Back in 2014, I was only 13 and I was a high achiever in high school and on the 31st of January in a lesson I had a twitch randomly set off on my left cheek where my check literally was shaking up and down out of control for around 30 seconds.

My best friend at the time saw it happen and she looked mortified.

I knew I wasn’t imagining it then.

After it occurred I was sent out of the classroom to calm down along with my friend who seemed pretty traumatised.

I’d go round all the members of staff who were in charge of my wellbeing and they all said it must have been me being tired but I knew it wasn’t that because I wasn’t feeling tired at all until that occurred.

When I got home from school I told my mum and dad who didn’t believe my either and that drove me insane.

I coincidentally had a doctors appointment on that same day about something else and me and my dad went and I explained and my doctor was on my side at this point and said if anything of that sort happens again come back and to ask if the teacher in the lesson of when it all happened saw it.

Sadly she didn’t nor anyone else bar my friend.

Nothing happened again so I forgot about it and believed maybe they were right and I was just worn out by schoolwork.

Until 3 weeks later.

After 3 weeks another one of a similar sort happened while it was just me and my dad home and you could tell he was pretty mortified too.

This one was different to the previous ones where this time my mouth was jerking from a normal position into a position that people having strokes have their mouth drop down and I was making grunt noises yet I was still conscious and able to walk.

This one lasted around a minute and was a lot stronger than the previous.

After the second one I was having them every 3 days and everyone was becoming more aware and we then got the doctors involved after we caught a few on tape.

We had the doctors refer us to the epilepsy clinic because it turns out you can have a conscious seizure which we never knew.

We soon learnt that I had seizures and I needed an MRI scan I was slightly relieved to have a diagnosis that we can focus on preventing them.

After my MRI scan we discovered not just epilepsy but also 6 tumours and one was in quite a dangerous place.

My ventricle, this is when everything got serious and all my appointments and referrals were coming through sooner.

We were just lucky they weren’t cancerous.

No one had a clue what these were and I was referred to an even bigger hospital in a city and this is what scared my whole family the fact of not getting a diagnosis on tumours.

After months and months of appointments I was attending, I couldn’t be in school a lot and my grades and attendance were lowering which wasn’t like me at all.

We also discovered that I was having smaller seizures so often I could fit 90 into 1 day and that was so embarrassing and being a 13-year-old your main goal is to fit in and be like everybody else and I realised that’s not the case and I was distraught.

I was showing symptoms of depression and I never felt happy anymore so I was set up to meet with the school counsellor weekly and see if expressing my feelings would help, it didn’t.

I swapped to a new counsellor because the original one left me in anger and I had to skip another lesson to calm down from how much anger the counsellor was giving me.

But the new counsellor was amazing and more like a friend than a therapist. She got me through things.

Whilst things in the doctors were still happening I started being put on medication and seeing if they worked.

Unfortunately, it took 5 different types of medication to handle these seizures which were getting stronger and stronger. I’m now on 3 different medications to prevent all these.

I was still depressed and I couldn’t see the light at the end of the tunnel and I started having panic attacks that not many of my friends understood or really didn’t want to be a part of this mess I was so I started to lose friends which hurt me even worse.

The first person who gave up on my was really unexpected was my best friend for around 13 years, we’d known each other our whole lives.

He’d discovered his own friends and convinced them to not like me either. This didn’t help my depression at and I was just sinking lower and lower.

Still changing medication at this point I started one called Keppra which is known for something called Keppra rage which would lead the person the get angry and physical for no reason.

I got this and I went lower than rock bottom and all it did was make my seizures worse and they started to happen more in school.

This led me to lose more friends

Then back in 2015 which was an entire year later in February I had to go to London for a PET scan and we made a mini holiday out of it and I really enjoyed it and I actually got the right medication to stop my seizures and my tumours hadn’t grown at all but I did have tuberous sclerosis which 1 in around 6,000 people have in the UK which is crazy.

When I got back from London everything started to chill out and my mood was lifting it was great.

Have you or someone you know have Tuberous Sclerosis? Please share your stories with us.

`The Cornish Charity CEO who made me resign

Cornish charity CEO'S MESSAGE

When joining Disabiltiy Cornwall I never imagined months later the Cornish Charity CEO would force be to resign.

It was October 2011, and I joined a Cornish Charity in a new temporary role as an Online Administrator, for three days a week.

The role was a new role, so the Cornish charity CEO wasn’t clear in what she expected me to do.

My duties included updating the website which is built by a man who lived in Newquay who they used as their Web Developer.

He used a CMS called Joomla, which I had never used before.

I also updated their social media channels, Facebook, and Twitter as well as participating in their offline magazine and populating their other side project which was an online list of Cornish places that are disabled friendly.

The CEO told me that I could choose my working days, so I choose Monday, Tuesdays and Wednesdays.

I was expected to also attend events such as online and social media events in London and Plymouth.

I had ideas such as fundraisers and concerts which were met by negative constant criticism and reminders from my CEO about not having enough funding to do anything.

Things started to go a little bit sour when a new lady started in Finance, and I was asked to change my working days because the new lady needed to use my desk, so I was asked to work on Wednesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays.

I felt a little bit out of place but continued to stay upbeat and positive and determined to turn this part-time job into a successful full-time role for the charity.

My CEO and her administrator had an idea; they wanted me to ask celebrities on Twitter to donate memorabilia and sell it off in an eBay auction to make money.

I was a little bit unsure about this idea because I thought it would look like we were begging.

I voiced my concerns to my CEO’s administrator, and we decided to go along with what we were told to do.

Over the next week or so someone had written a negative tweet about the charity always asking for money.

The CEO’s administrator told the CEO, and I was then pulled into the office.

Once in the office the CEO was really nasty to me and blamed me for the negative tweet which was written by her and her administrator, all I did was post it to the social media channels.

She also said that her team had known each other for years and that I didn’t fit in with them because they are all friends out of work as well as at work.

She then said she would be giving me a week before deciding on what to do with me!

I even joined the after-work Yoga sessions and ended up working with the CEO’s number two.

Her job was to get funding for projects and write the bids, and I was the one driving the tech side.

We wanted to build a mobile app, showing disabled-friendly places in Cornwall.

I had also started attending the ILM Level 3 management course which I was told to do on my day off and all the other staff were paid to do this.

The next week the CEO said that she and her staff were pleased with me and indicated that things were improving.

I was also mentoring a young lad who is deaf and helping him. Once when the website went down, I was talking to the young lad on the chat in my own time when I was finished work.

A month later I was about an hour away from finishing work when I noticed something sinister was happening.

The office door was locked, and I could see through the big glass window that the CEO called in her right-hand man who was in charge of the offline magazine and who for some reason never appeared to like me much.

About half an hour later she called in her administrator who I saw in tears and then I knew something was happening.

I was packing away about to leave for the week when out marched the CEO with an envelope in her hand.

She gave it to me and said I think I need to give you this?

I ran out of the building and to my car and shredded open the envelope, and there it was in black and white.

I was being invited to a disciplinary meeting because I was supposed to have been I had been caught sending emails to my father from my work account asking him what he thought of the work.

I wanted to make a good impression, and I was so keen to be the best that I was looking for advice.

The CEO had thought that my father was doing all my work when he wasn’t.

The letter also said that I didn’t do as I was told, but this was untrue because I did everything and more!

This made me so ill that I was signed off with stress for two weeks and when I told the CEO that I was off with work-related stress she said: “I’m very sorry to hear you are unwell but are you still coming to the meeting on Thursday?”

She even got her number two to ring me up and persuade me to hand in my notice.

But her number two said that “If you come back to work until we find someone else, you can continue with your ILM course, and you will get a reference and that the meeting will go ahead without me unless I hand in my notice within the next hour.”

I agreed to come back after two weeks if I could continue on the course.

Once I had handed my notice in, the CEO said that she didn’t want me back and that she would pay me up until the end of the month and that I can’t continue with the ILM course.

Unfortunately, employers are allowed to treat you how they want because if you haven’t been in a job for two years, they can get rid of you without reason!

I was shocked by how a Cornish Charity who is supposed to care about people with disabilities can decide to force someone who is suffering from mental health problems to hand in their notice!

Why are celebrities glamorising mental health?

 

glamorising mental health

Why are celebrities glamorising mental health instead of putting their money where their mouth is?

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry are spearheading a Heads Together campaign to end the stigma around mental health.

Heads Together aims to change the national conversation on mental health and wellbeing and is a partnership with inspiring charities with decades of experience in tackling stigma, raising awareness, and providing vital help for people with mental health challenges.

Throughout the past week, mental health has been a huge topic in the media with Prince Harry confessing to having counselling following the death of his mother, the late Princess Diana as well as getting pop star Lady Gaga involved.

The Prince finally came clean about the death of his mother in an interview with the Daily Telegraph which went live on a podcast.

He disclosed that he has spoken to a professional about his mental health, he describes how he only began to address his grief when he was 28 after feeling “on the verge of punching someone” and facing anxiety during royal engagements.

Describing the “quite serious effect” that losing his mother had on his personal and professional life, he tells how living in the public eye left him feeling he could be “very close to a complete breakdown on numerous occasions”.

The Prince, now 32, turned to counsellors and even took up boxing.

He says he is now in “a good place.”

But he added: “I can’t encourage people enough just to have that conversation because you will be surprised firstly, how much support you get and secondly, how many people literally are longing for you to come out.”

Confessing he was “a little nervous, a little tight in the chest” about the interview, the Prince said he was determined to make a difference while the younger members of the Royal family are “still interesting” to the public, doing his bit before Prince George, Princess Charlotte and any of his own future children step into the spotlight.

It’s easy for Prince Harry to gain access to proper counselling because he has the money and the contacts to receive the best treatments available as have other celebrities who enter The Priory to overcome their drug and alcohol dependency and mental breakdowns.

I’m not trying to put down Prince Harry because from my own experiences it’s hard to admit you have a problem and it’s even harder to seek help for that problem, and mental health still has a lot of stigmas attached to it.

Popstar Lady Gaga also came clean to the media during a Facetime call with Prince Williams by talking about her PTSD and mental illness.

In a video released on Tuesday, the pop star joined the Duke of Cambridge’s Heads Together, a campaign he leads along with the Duchess and Prince Harry to raise awareness on mental illness.

With 1 in every 4 people suffering from mental health issues in the UK, how many of us can receive the diagnosis and treatments required if it costs thousands of pounds.

Many of us are given anti-depressants and a standard 12 sessions of CBT (Cognitive Behavioural Therapy) where you apply techniques which you can print off the internet.

For me, this didn’t work, and it’s not surprising as the counsellors themselves tell you that unless you have at least 16 sessions, you are unlikely to succeed with CBT.

After a brush with the criminal justice system, I was finally put on the CMHT (Community Mental Health Team), and they were of no benefit to my health either.

They just considered me as another criminal mental health statistic and refused to even treat me until a year later. After a few months, they were keen to release me due to lack of NHS funding.

There’s one thing trying to end the stigma of having a mental health problem, another also adding a criminal record to that mental illness and then there’s the incredibly important part being diagnosed correctly and given the correct medication, counselling and tools to be able to get better.

Let us know your thoughts on our social media channels comment below or email admin@digitalclassic.co.uk.

Outlook South West unacceptable update

 

Outlook South West sent one of our viewers an unacceptable letter and is happy for me to print this information about an appalling update.

On Monday morning, an unacceptable update from Outlook South West arrived.

The person who received this letter has given their permission for me to post on here.

I was referred to them by my GP after the Mental Health team in Penzance in Cornwall decided to release me from the MHT late last year without a proper diagnosis due to NHS funding.

The letter below states that Outlook South West has got nowhere with the mental health team and isn’t sure which treatments are best for me so they too decided to wash their hands of the situation by discharging me because they have stated that they couldn’t get hold of me.

Outlook South West unacceptable update letter

1: At no point have Outlook South West left an answerphone message on the home or mobile, and there were no missed calls on any phones!

2: They could have corresponded by letter, just like they did with the correspondence received!

3: They could have contacted the GP and asked them to follow this up!

Instead, all they do is pass the buck.

There’s a lot of recent talk about mental health on TV, the news, and even local Cornish radio such as the Laurence Reed show on BBC Radio Cornwall. But in reality, talking doesn’t change facts.

For example, would Alistair Campbell and Freddie Flintoff had come clean about their mental health problems before they were given top jobs?

No, they wouldn’t because of discrimination, which sadly still exists.

Is it any wonder that Cornwall has the highest suicide in the country if there isn’t any help or support available on the NHS?

Another thing that I find atrocious is the fact that patients in Cornwall are unable to see their doctor and face long waiting lists of over a month.

They could go and see another doctor, but going to a different GP causes more anxiety and frustration because of the inconsistency.

Let me know if you have any problems getting an appointment with your GP or with local mental health teams?

Is it just Cornwall or do other parts of the country also have this problem?

I am posting this in the hope that this blog can raise awareness and get things done as they should. Proper treatment should be available for all.

Has anyone else experienced anything similar to Outlook South West?

Not just the wealthy, famous, and privileged!

Please comment below in the comments section or join in the discussions on our social media channels.

Reviewing Motivational Tattoos

motivational tattoos milk cartons

I’ve been looking forward to reviewing these lovely motivational tattoos, and I choose these ones because I love the light pastel colours that go with my spring and summer clothing.

The aim of these tattoos is to place them on your arm or on the back of your hand where you can see them and look at them when you are having a bad day, and they should help to cheer you up.

These motivational tattoos are also great motivational messages for teenagers who are about to take their GCSEs or A-Levels or for young adults who are about to graduate.

In times when you or your loved ones are feeling depressed, these are fantastic for helping to cheer them up with a positive message that everyone can relate to such as “Treat yourself”,” Believe in yourself or “Positive attitude”.

motivational tattoos of bandages

The temporary bandage tattoos include positive quotes are waterproof and last up to 5 days

They are printed with new technology from Inkwell, which makes them more detailed, realistic, and colourful than any other temporary tattoos out there.

They last up to 5 days and are easily removed with baby oil.

These tattoos can easily be removed with baby oil.

If you would like to get your hands on some motivational temporary tattoos, you can buy these temporary tattoos for under £20 for a pack of 15, and if these aren’t your cup of tea, then you can also purchase badges and other motivational gifts on the Motivational Bandage website.

In each box you will get 15 tattoos:
Love Yourself (hearts) x 3
Treat Yourself (strawberries) x 3
You Are Cute (bows) x 3
Believe in Yourself (clouds) x 3
You Are Worth it (stars) x 3

Conclusion

These Motivational Tattoos look great, include great messages and as a mental health sufferer, I would purchase them for myself or for a loved one.

What is CAT (Cognitive Analytic Therapy)?

CAT Therapy

When my Community Mental Health nurse said she was giving me a course of CAT Therapy I asked myself the same question,what is CAT Therapy?

CAT stands for Cognitive Analytic Therapy; is a therapy technique that looks at the way a person thinks, feels, and acts, and the events and relationships that underlie these experiences (often from childhood or earlier in life).

After being on the Mental Health team for over a year, they finally decided to give me some much-needed therapy.

I had already had 12 sessions of CBT therapy and almost a year’s worth of Psycho Therapy with a private therapist which cost me hundreds of pounds.

I wasn’t even sure whether CAT therapy would work, considering none of the other treatments had, but I decided to give them a go. I was supposed to have 12 sessions, but I only had 11 before the CMHT decided to discharge me.

During my CAT Therapy sessions, I was asked to draw a mind map that included a happy place (which was a desert island) and a bad place (a sea of sharks) with arrows leading to highs, lows, and in-between moods.

I was also handed some internet printouts to read and go through during the 45-minute sessions.

Did I find these sessions beneficial?

I managed to finish the map of my whole life journey within a few sessions.

I still feel like I could still do with some more therapy but without a proper diagnosis, I’m not sure which therapy would be best for me.

I attend a Bipolar group monthly, where there are people who have better control of their illness than me and are very honest with giving me advice on staying healthy and safe.

I’m also still waiting for Outlook South West to work out whether they are going to help me or whether they are going to put me back on the mental health team for a proper diagnosis and more therapy.

Have you or someone you know ever had CAT Therapy?

What are your thoughts on CAT Therapy?

Comment below or join in the conversation on our social media pages Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Google +, and Pinterest.

Why suicide rates in the UK are on the rise

suicide rates

Suicide rates at an all-time high in the UK with statistics on the rise and this won’t decrease anytime soon, thanks to our government who have cut mental health funds to make up the NHS shortfall.

Theresa May has done you turn on a plan to give an extra 800 million to the NHS which was earmarked to help people with severe mental health problems.

An article in the Guardian claims that a letter written by NHS England’s finance chief, Paul Baumann, which has been seen by the Health Service Journal. Makes it clear that the £800m, which NHS England held back from its 209 clinical commissioning groups this year, will help stabilise NHS finances.

In his letter, Baumann confirms that NHS England now intends to use the “full amount” of the contingency fund to offset overspends by NHS acute hospital trusts in 2016-17.

In 2016 the health department had to dip into emergency funds of £205m.

Diverting the contingency money helped save the health secretary, Jeremy Hunt and his department’s mistakes.

Which tells us that are health secretary is incapable of his position and should be fired.

“In an interview, Jeremy Hunt has said that children’s mental services are the NHS’s biggest failing.

This is no surprise, especially now that the NHS is going to divert funding for trust deficits.

NHS England played down the impact on important services.

“As we’ve been saying since the start of the year, we set aside £800m to cover provider deficits if needed, and we do now need to,” a spokesman said.

“This is uncommitted money that would otherwise have been invested at the discretion of commissioners.

It will be important to get the trust deficit down next year, so planned investments can take place.”

Please let us know your thoughts on this and how you think the UK can lower its suicide rates?