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Depressed at 13, Terri’s battle to get the right support is the norm for young Scots

This opinion piece is over 8 years old
 

​Terri Smith has spent seven years struggling with severe mental health problems, she says mental health services are failing young Scots

Aged just 13, I felt trapped in a world where I felt no one understood me, nor did I understand myself. I experienced both depression and anxiety at early adolescence, but I had never been informed about mental health problems, the symptoms or where to get help.

I’ve been a member of the Scottish Youth Parliament for 7 years, and just this month I was elected as chair of the organisation. Over the years I’ve campaigned on so many issues that I care about, the issues that are affecting the lives of young people in Scotland. Currently the Scottish Youth Parliament has made young people’s mental health our national campaign. As both chair of the organisation and a young person who has experience with mental health problems, I feel that it is important for me to speak out about my own experiences. After all, the name of our campaign is Speak Your Mind.

Terri Smith

As a country we are failing young people, and it’s time to ensure we listen to the voices of those who are suffering

Terri Smith

After years of torturing myself and reaching a breaking point, I finally sought help when I was 19 years-old. I realised my mental state, as well as my behaviour, weren’t healthy when Coronation Street actress Anne Kirkbride died. I began uncontrollably crying for a woman I had never met, let alone known. I realised that I was in fact crying about something else entirely, something that I would need help to understand and talk about.

After a trip to my GP, I was diagnosed with depression, given anti-depressants, and a referral to a psychiatrist. I felt a weight had been lifted off my shoulders, but I also felt let down and confused because I had been palmed-off with medication I had no knowledge about. After being on the antidepressants for while, I experienced a mental health crisis. The antidepressants triggered a manic episode, followed by a bout of depression so severe I tried to take my own life. After all of this I was finally diagnosed with bipolar disorder, and received the correct medication for me, along with fantastic counselling from a third-sector youth organisation.

Only in the last twelve weeks have I seen a dramatic improvement in my own mental health. My recovery has been slow and steady, but the treatment I am receiving is enabling me to become mentally healthy for the first time since I was 13 years-old. My experience and journey doesn’t end there. The constant battle for professionally adequate help remains, as does the need to tackle the negative stigma that I often feel around me.

My story is important, because young people all over Scotland are experiencing the same problems. As a country we are failing young people, and it’s time to ensure we listen to the voices of those who are suffering, help them access the support they need, and finally stop making mental health a taboo topic. We need to speak openly and honestly. We need to speak our minds.

Terri Smith is the chair of the Scottish Youth Parliament

 

Comments

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Kee
over 8 years ago
Sad to read this when I have had similar experiences nearly 20 years ago now! I went to Dr as I felt upset all the time having lost my parents – he instantly labelled me depressed, gave some pills and two weeks later I was in hospital following a suicide attempt – and then the ward doctor belittled me by telling the students “this one’s put himself in here, wasting resources” I am disturbed that the article yet again highlights the status quo of 'sticking a diagnostic label' on an individual’s mental distress... Reading about "treatments" really gets my goat! I would love to read something that acknowledges that WE ALL suffer mental distress rather than this constant regurgitation of the medical models ‘mental illness/health’ model. Rather than label and treat individuals, how about we address the societal causes behind everyone’s distress? How about we acknowledge we are living in a fake, materialistic, corporate led, culturally nihilistic society – a CRAP world – yet rather than change society and its blatant corruption, 24/7 media propaganda we continue to ‘guess’ what’s up and label people with names from the DSM - In my understanding the only diagnosis in the DSM iv that has been proven to exist is Schizophrenia... And even then it is based on patient disclosure and self reporting. I am very sad that this young girl has taken to being ‘treated’ by so called ‘professionals’... The commodification of health continues. And I bet health professionals who read this will say “ah but the medical model is evidence based” – Yes, and the evidence and research is funded by the drug makers!!! I am a health professional and most of my time is spent trying to undo the damage caused by pharmaceutical treatments and medical interventions! People need people, not treatment, not drugs – just hugs!
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