By Lee Sommerville
Head of Customer Partnerships, Pocketworks
October 10, 2022
Updated October 10, 2022
By Lee Sommerville
Head of Customer Partnerships, Pocketworks
October 10, 2022
Updated October 10, 2022
Today is World Mental Health Day across the globe, which here at Pocketworks we think is a very awesome thing in raising awareness. In order to honour the day, I wanted to write this article for any reader who may be struggling, giving a first-person insight into how mental health can affect you, and how you can work on healing yourself.
A startling stat is that 1 in 4 of us will experience a mental health problem of some kind each year, yet far too many suffer in silence. This is not right, it is not the way and I know this all too well.
I have suffered with my mental health for around three years now, the most acute of which has been this year itself. I can say that now and remain proud, but therein lies the problem.
There is still a profound stigma to admitting to your friends, family and even more so your colleagues that you need help, particularly for a man. This needs to change and I hope that World Mental Health Day will help the stigma to fade. This is just my small part in that, based on my path to today.
So how did I get here? Well, it is never by choice and from late 2019 I had one bad life event after another. They just kept coming and I could not stop them. The whole world then got sick with COVID and Lockdown ensued.
It was suffocating at times, with bad days that bred worse behaviour. But generally, there were enough breaks and happiness intertwined for me to convince myself I was ok in the day-to-day.
Sadly though, I very suddenly lost my Dad last year after a long illness. It was not anticipated and it happened ironically during a very happy period for me. I thought that I coped well at the time with arranging the funeral and all of that. However, I know now this is when the real foundations began to slowly crumble internally for me, breaking under the weight of the final tipping point.
This culminated earlier this year when a day came when I could not get out of bed, at all. We have all heard such stories, but I had always gotten out of bed, not this time though. My brain made a quiet but clever cry for help and picked a day that I could not hide from the world, and when I did those around me could not help but notice. Long story short, the day ended with both friends, and colleagues at my door looking for answers.
This was the beginning of the path I am now on, the latest checkpoint of which is this article itself.
For anyone reading this who may be struggling, this is the most important part.
You are not alone, I was not alone and from that fateful day on everyone who knew what was occurring pulled together. They wrapped their collective arms around me to form a protective shield that would not allow it to continue.
They showed up because my actions forced them to, but do you know what? I know now they would have done exactly the same if I had just asked them by talking to them.
Far too many of us bring about change when we are broken because we are forced to by our actions that others cannot ignore. But we really do know deep down that we are falling apart, way before that. Change is harder the later you arrest it, but god knows I understand it is hard to open up.
I am lucky, I have a loving, extended family, some of the best friends you could possibly wish for, and colleagues that are a lot more than that, some more like family themselves. I also have an incredible son, and though we are no longer together, an amazing relationship with his Mum which is rare for separated parents.
Any single one of them would have taken my call, every single one of them would have listened, not judged and would have helped me had I tried. Every single one of them. And that is a fact.
But I reached out to nobody and eventually sank like a stone to the bottom. I do see some value in the theory that there is comfort in hitting rock bottom, as the only way is up. But trust me, I have been there and I don't want you to be.
You may also be like me, where historically you are the one that holds everyone up when the shit hits the fan, which makes you feel even less like opening up. But forget that now, it is just one of the many reasons the person you choose to speak with will go out of their way to help you. That is also a fact.
So what happened next for me? I reached out, I talked and I listened. I heard what my GP had to say, the business reached out for Occupational Health support. It became known in all of the circles I mentioned above that I was unwell and that I needed help.
This help ranged from daily calls with people from within those circles, friends reaching out in dedicated WhatsApp groups, morning check-in calls with colleagues, medication, time out from work, meditation, journaling, grief counselling, a CBT course and even life coaching.
I changed my routine and behaviours, allowed new ways of thinking and accepted that there are many things I could do to help myself and brought them into my life, some of which I will go into further detail about later.
The biggest help of all though was being free to talk to people about it all, knowing everyone knew, and free of feeling like a burden or a letdown. Free of feeling like I was on my own, weak, stupid or a failure. All of these are normal thoughts when breaking, but fuck that, it is not the way.
And what did this bring? Change, really really positive and consistent change. I would like to say the brain heals itself like a broken bone and is stronger after the event. I cannot say this, as I am no expert and I am still in the healing process. But what I can promise you is you will feel immense relief when you are no longer silently facing battles on your own.
You will feel strength in numbers. You will feel protected. You will feel exponentially more powerful. And that is the best fact of them all.
Ultimately you cannot hide how you are from work, you spend more time interacting with your colleagues than anyone else. It is likely they will see signs before you know they are there, mine certainly did.
But if they don’t, please remember there will always be someone who can help you in every business you work for, big or small. Some useful tips from my experience would be:
Once you have opened up, and begun healing it is important to focus on it, and make positive changes to your routine for maximum impact. There are many, but here are just a few examples that are working for me:
We all get a little lost sometimes, but when it is more than that, and you will know when it is, then accept it. Embrace it, then act on it. There is no shame in any of this, ever.
If you have read this and are struggling, please believe you can heal and start to do so one step at a time. Try to bring change when you are breaking and not actually broken.
Talk to someone if you need to, literally today, right now in fact. Just do it.
No matter what, the sun will rise again and the world will keep turning, you deserve to be in it, and everybody wants you to be in it.
You will be a better version of yourself in time, if I can do it then you can do it too.
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