This week, Ian Thorpe admitted he has suffered crippling depression for much of his life. In his new book This Is Me: The Autobiography, he speaks candidly of the battle he’s fought with depression and how he used alcohol to self-medicate. He even considered suicide.
According to News Ltd reports:
Thorpe said he had never spoken openly about his illness.“Not even my family is aware that I’ve spent a lot of my life battling what I can only describe as a crippling depression,” he said.
The 30-year-old said he had striven to be perfect and had wanted to keep what he felt was a “character flaw” from his family.
After the Sydney Olympics and while training for Athens, Thorpe decided to get answers and had a “clandestine visit” to a doctor, where he got “some help”, including medication.
On the surface, it would be easy to wonder what Ian Thorpe could have been depressed about. World famous, Olympic hero, young, rich, preternaturally talented….. but to wonder that is to not understand depression and the way it can strike indiscriminantely.
Blogger and author, Heather Armstrong has suffered depression and anxiety, like Ian Thorpe, for much of her life to the point where she was briefly hospitalised.
Below is a speech that Heather Armstrong delivered at the ribbon cutting ceremony for a new unit at the University Neuropsychiatric Institute in her home state.
If you suffer from or know anyone that suffers from depression you need to read this and pass it along. In fact even if depression hasn’t touched your world, please read and share it anyway because one day it might….
Heather writes……
“I remember the first conversation I had with someone about my mental health. I was seventeen, too young at the time to understand that it was actually my mental health and not some character flaw that made it impossible to tackle the simplest of problems. My life was filled with the normal stress that a senior in high school endures — papers, tests, acne, ill-fitting bras — but my reaction to that stress was to panic. Everything felt completely out of control, so I stopped eating to prove that I could control something.
Top Comments
Why always
the comparison of diabetes with depression?! It has nothing to do... just
because is simpler to explain doesn’t make it a true... it's so annoying seeing
that repeated “ad nauseam” without the minimum facts to support it; The true
fact is... by ingesting a substance who disrupt the serotonin system (a system
who regulates the “tone” of emotions)...
the consequence will be... the disruption of the serotonin system! Desensitization
of the serotonin system and diminished “amplitude range” of most emotions... less
guilt, less shame, less rumination… in
the end it could be good for some people (it is, at least temporary) but it
doesn’t change the trueness of the real effects... stop with the nonsense anology of insulin and serotonin!
I realised I had PND when I was reading one of those kids emotional books "When I'm Feeling Sad". The first page of the story says:
When I'm feeling sad
I feel like someone has taken
all the colours away...
and everything is grey and gloomy and droopy.
That was exactly how I felt right at that moment and I knew it was time to get help. When thinking about my illness I think I've always had depressive tendencies and it is something I'm still working on with a new psychologist. I may have to go back onto meds, but for now I'm doing a lot of really really hard work on core beliefs, self esteem, mindfulness and a bunch of other CBT. It's really fricking hard, and I dread each session, but I can feel myself slowly changing some of the beliefs I have about myself which in turn is helping my relationships and ultimately giving me the tools to help if I have another bad turn.
Depression is a complete and utter c-u-next-tuesday. :-(