It is impossible to make it on your own within the current mental health system in the UK if you suffer from serious mental illness such as schizophrenia, chronic depression or bipolar disorder. By āmaking itā I mean to live. Live life with some decency and hope. Enjoy small pleasures in life. Smile because you catch a happy moment in life. Have friends around. Go out for music gigs or cinema. Wishing to be alive.
My father helped me: thatās why I am still here! Just not in the UK that I love deeply. I was lucky to get out and return to my home in the Netherlands.
Itās more than a broken mental health system there, itās hell.
You donāt get help on time. Even when you go by yourself to the emergency department you might see a consultant psychiatrist 24 hours later, which is too late when you are on the brink of psychosis. I was in full blown āpsychosisā by the time the doctors finally showed up, and even then, I had to convince them I needed help. Urgent help. Whatever I experienced in a psychosis, I found that I needed a safe place to process it. Doctors and nurses around to help me not to get into trouble. When in psychosis, one loses control over life, and may need urgent, immediate help.
However, once you get into the system, itās almost impossible to get out. You are stuck in a psychiatric hospital for at least a month, usually sectioned under the Mental Health Act.
Itās a prison. Due to lack of staff at NHS (the medical system in the UK) you are left to rot. No walks, no art therapy any longer, no one to support you. They used to have a gym, church service, music sessions, even karaoke. Itās all gone. There arenāt enough nurses, and those who are still there have to spend all their time on administration, writing notes, instead of caring after the patients. It used to be so different when I first arrived in 2008. They even had dog therapy and a masseuse who would give you a free head massage. They used to have a āgreenā room where one could play a guitar or just chill. Something changed since then. Being mentally unwell has become a crime.
To get rid of you, due to lack of beds, you are forced to accept lithium, a sentence in the long term for some. Itās the cheapest drug on the market, that can lead to kidney failure. There are better meds available on the market in other countries. I donāt understand the reason as to why they impose on you such a meagre choice. It is super weird to feel that you are a shame. An unwanted element of the society. You really feel it, the hatred.
You are punished for being ill. Stigma around mental illness (or condition as I prefer to call it) is huge in England. Due to lack of staff at NHS they hire external agency workers who hate you. They chat loudly, next to your door at night, while you try to sleep and watch you, without any compassion or empathy. You just want to run out and die. I would have done it, if not for my son. He needs me.
Their bragging about accepting mental health disability at the workplace is bullshit. Every time I disclosed my disability while applying for a job, I wasnāt even invited for an interview, including at the university where I was already working for years, can you imagine??? They just prolonged my casual, zero-hour contract, instead of offering me stability and a break. Itās very tough to live when you arenāt sure you will be able to buy food the next month. And all that while I am an excellent teacher, earning everything in life based on merit. I have a PhD, two mastersā degrees, teaching qualifications, etc, etc. Students loved me, and I loved my job. But not knowing your future when you are raising a child, while being actually officially disabled (I am diagnosed with bipolar disorder), is an impossible task.
Thatās why we just left the country all together, me and my son. No need to tell me ājust go back to your countryā, I left by myself, in tears.
The aftercare after the hospital is nonexistent. They donāt have enough staff. They are desperate to write you off. After they released me from the hospital on 15 mg of aripiprazole, I saw my new (they always changed) psychiatrist a month later. I am not kidding. He knew nothing about me, saying that maybe it was time that I stop my meds. I stared at him in shock, thinking he was joking, but he wasnāt. I couldnāt sleep on aripiprazole, which is essential for someone who is vulnerable to psychosis (like me). Eventually I āsavedā myself due to the fact that I had a stock of quetiapine in my house. I just switched to it in order to be able to sleep, and presented it as fait accompli to my GP, who prescribed me the medication without any questions.
I wish I could add something positive about the UK mental health system but I canāt.
Today they want to cut benefits of the most fragile and vulnerable group of people. They want to cut the disability payment (called PIP) that is almost impossible to get in the first place. I was on it, because my assessor was kind. She saw I wasnāt lying, I could barely stand on my feet. I wanted to die. The disability allowance helped me to feel a bit less stressed about money that I didnāt have enough in the first place. Their whole benefit system is just stupid, no excuse. Itās called universal credit, which goes down when you start working, where you end up much worse off. You wonāt be able to get PIP while working. They think itās as simple like that. That people just donāt want to work. They donāt understand that mental distress is real. They donāt get it that someone can work only part-time, or maybe not able to work at all. Itās a hard job when you are overdosed on their cheap drugs, unable to get out of bed in the morning. And this is the daily reality of the majority of British people who struggle with mental health. They are treated like rats.
We all want to work, but canāt because itās discouraged by the whole benefit system. Not that you can actually live on it. Most of us are very poor, sometimes homeless. I told you already, my father helped me. Without him I would probably be on the street, with my child ending up in social care, and they do threaten you with taking away your child when you are not complying. When you donāt take your medication, when you raise your voice and ask for some legal rights, when you are simply trying to get better and live.
The whole system is broken and I pray for my friends in Great Britain. They need a reform, not cuts or euthanasia. Will the current government listen? Is there any hope left?
A very accurate description of the UK and the so called “mental health service”.
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When I first came to the UK to live there (in 2008), and ended up in a hospital with a psychosis, I thought I ended up at some kind of a party, but where medication was involved.
Nurses were kind and patient (they didn’t have at that time to write down about single little thing patients did), and had time to focus on us. They would take us on walks and shopping, laughing and clearly enjoying their jobs. The kitchen staff was amazing (and still is), always asking me how I was doing when they saw me. Saying that if I didn’t like my dinner (they served warm food both for lunch AND dinner) I could order a salad instead.
Priest from the Church of England would come and collect those with faith to attend a service.
They would take us to art therapy where we could make beautiful stuff and take it home.
They had a gym and also classes for Tai Chi, karaoke nights, board games, etc.
It was while in the hospital that I decided I loved the country (UK) and wanted to stay.
So sad to watch it all crumbling from a distance, I hope that they will reconsider their drastic options and focus on reform and helping psychiatric patients, instead of ‘punishing’ them.
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Absolutely this is in no way an exaggeration at all. And for me the UK is an extraordinary sad, miserable and confused country that is literally collapsing emotionally and spiritually, and there is an almost apocalyptic rise in every kind of emotional and energetic pathology. But one day we will discover the true nature of psychological and emotional healing and realize that to try and administer it as an external expert is the insanity of an immature society. Real healing is a real known process and it takes place internally, not through the words of another, although talking honestly helps one encounter what is internal, and that honest talking requires you to be an honest human being desiring to understand the other, not inflict on them a program or an interpretation or some kind of ‘therapy’. Healing does not involve therapy – IT INVOLVES THE TRUTH. “Only truth can liberate, not your effort to be free” (Krishnamurti). Now any psychiatrists or therapists out there: put that in your pipe and smoke it! And tell me how it tastes and whether you enjoyed it or threw up (don’t worry mate, I know how it tastes – not like heroine or crack but more like weed! Because healing is natural not social. But 9 out of 10 psychiatrists and therapists will vomit, and the other one will do a chicken dance and jump out the window).
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”the UK is an extraordinary sad, miserable and confused country that is literally collapsing emotionally and spiritually, and there is an almost apocalyptic rise in every kind of emotional and energetic pathology. ”
This breaks my heart. I love the UK. I pray things will change for the better!
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At least there are some good British psychologists and psychiatrists speaking out against the fraud and harm of psychiatry. In the States, I think it’s likely much worse than in the UK, perhaps in part because we have too many “mental health professionals?”
For goodness sake, I had one psychiatrist – who was the psychiatric “snowing” partner of the now FBI convicted V.R. Kuchipudi – who spent years fraudulently listing me as her “out patient,” despite the fact I was never her “out patient.”
And a decade plus later I was also medically unnecessarily approached by a psychologist, who tried to gaslight me into signing a take a percentage of gross thievery contract, combined with a conservatorship contract, that was disingenuously claimed to be an “art manager” contract – of course I refused to sign his appalling thievery contract. But I did find out a few years after my family left the church where we met this psychologist, that this psychologist had been illegally hacking into my computer for years.
So I agree with you the hate, of the scientifically “invalid” “mental health professionals” towards those of us mothers who stand against child abuse in my case, is most definitely blatantly obvious – to the point of being downright criminal behavior. And it was my love, in part for my young children who needed me, that helped save me, too.
Thanks for sharing, and God bless, Ekaterina.
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Thank you for reading and responding, and God bless you too.
Yes, the situation in the field of psychiatric care is different from country to country and needs a more unified approach, I feel. So many people who suffer: due to overdose of the meds they get, being lonely and isolated, feeling unworthy and bad due to overwhelming stigma, lost in this world.
Things need to change.
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Here is my mental health advice to the children of the deluded. I pity all of you children who are on the leashes of the two confused pitbulls who are father and mother, and it doesn’t even matter if they are dead or alive, for the dead are alive in us, and it doesn’t even matter if the kid is a child or an adult, for the child lives on in all of us. So just release them for God’s sake. Or else you kids – bite through the leash or tear yourself away, for they would throw you all into hell to save their sorry selves. It’s how they wish to punish God. They cry, they moan, and they throw their babies into the fire. Run free now!
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Hi, sorry, I didn’t understand your post, what do you mean by ‘children of the deluded’?
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