Dear Nicola Sturgeon, DWP & anyone else who can maybe help
I am writing this because today I am having a bad day. And the main reason I am having a bad day is
because I feel hopeless. You see, I am
currently recovering from a very difficult period of anxiety, depression and
panic. (I also live with various other long term health conditions – but they
were not taken into account during my recent assessment with yourselves)
When I say very difficult, let me explain that that actually
means life threatening. Yes – I know
those are normally words that you hear attached to illnesses such as cancer or
heart disease, but let me tell you – mental illness is like cancer of the brain
and the heart all rolled into one.
Mental illness made me believe that my two young children
aged 8 and 11 would be better off without me in their life.
Mental illness made me believe that I am useless and
worthless and that I have no skills worth sharing with the world.
Mental illness made me believe that my close friends and
family were ashamed of me because of my illness – for being so weak and
useless.
So yes my mental illness was life threatening.
I am trying to recover, and have been for the last 10 months
from the day that I feel like I fell off the planet. For 7 of those months I have been awarded
Personal Independence Payment which I have never claimed before regardless of
living with many long term health conditions. And for the last 4 months I have
been receiving Employment Support Allowance.
Contrary to popular belief and what the media likes to portray – I do
not want to be on benefits for the rest of my life. I want to get back to work and I want to get
back to being able to effectively self-manage my health.
I want to get back to being the passionate, driven and
innovative person than many people know me to be and that I know is hiding
within me underneath all this self-hatred and self-doubt. I’m not going to give you my full CV here but
let’s just say I have done some damn good work in this country in the field of
mental health, which has been recognised at both national and international
level. And I want to get back to it –
but I’m stuck – you have me stuck right here being unwell – afraid to move
forward!!
And the reason I am having such a bad day is because I feel
completely stuck and in limbo. You see –
if I start to recover then the likelihood is that you will remove my
benefits. And if you remove my benefits
too soon whilst I am undertaking this absolutely vital recovery process then I
know that I have a high chance of ending back up in the desperate dark place
that I have fought so hard for the last 10 months to crawl out of. You see – just like recovery from cancer,
recovery from mental illness takes time.
For me it also means taking risks – facing my fears,
challenging my false beliefs.
Challenging the voices in my head that tell me that I’m a useless piece
of crap. Challenging the voices that
tell me that my family would be better off without me. And let me tell you - this is like running a
mental marathon every single day inside my own head.
Thankfully – like any recovery process things get easier as
time goes on, but that does not mean I am recovered. It means that I am recovering – and if you
pull the rug from under my feet then I assure you I am most likely to
fall.
So what do I do??? Do
I push myself to take risks which I know is the only way that I will move
forward – but risk losing my benefits or do I stay stuck where I am; wanting to
be well and effectively self-manage my health & well-being but unable to
for the fear of losing the benefits that can help me to get there.
Any advice would be gratefully received. I don't even know why I'm doing this.... putting my head above the parapit, but I guess in some small way I hope that my experiences will help change things in the future........
Yours sincerely
A distressed and frustrated benefits claimant