Content warning: This post includes discussion of suicide that may be distressing to some readers.
The nurse asks if I have anything sharp on me and I produce a pair of scissors from my underwear. The rest of my belongings have already been inspected and confiscated.
There’s no door on the toilet cubicle but she turns away while I pee into a cup. I hand it over, steaming liquid a lurid yellow, and she says I’m very dehydrated. I admit which drugs I may or may not have ingested over the last few months.
Watch: How to talk to people with anxiety. Post continues atfer video.
She says I’m not allowed to stay in my room between the hours of eight and four, but since I’ve just arrived she’ll leave me to get settled in.
A wire grid covers the window, which looks out onto an Aldi car park. I shut the curtains even though it’s early afternoon.
For the first 24 hours I’m on 15-minute checks, which means someone making sure I’m not dead at quarter-hour intervals.
That night the walls close in on me. I throw furniture around my room and a member of staff hisses for me to stop. I hide inside my wardrobe.
I’m turfed out of my room at 8 am.
I’m scared of the other women and avoid the canteen, opting instead to curl up on the window seat outside my bedroom door.
The ward is all natural light, beech wood and pastel walls ‒ not like in Girl, Interrupted. It wraps around a pretty garden where the other women smoke.