Shaz – Interview 08
Anorexia in her teenage years was the earliest symptom of Shaz’s mental health problems. At 19 she began seeing a psychiatrist whom she still sees today. Over the years, Shaz has battled many illnesses including depression, anxiety and asthma and has taken medication for a number of health conditions she is living with. She has attempted suicide a few times.
Shaz has grappled with self-esteem problems since adolescence when she struggled to fit in at school and felt she had nobody to talk to, having no friends and parents who were strict and emotionally distant. She recalls first feeling depressed at about 15, which was also when she began to abuse prescription drugs (paracetamol). After completing Year 10 she obtained a hairdressing apprenticeship. However in part because of an overbearing boss and a high-pressure workplace, as well as a desire to gain acceptance through being slim, anorexia got the better of her and she never pursued hairdressing. So severe was her anorexia that she was hospitalised, and it took nine months for her to gain enough weight to be discharged.
Back home, life with her parents and siblings was difficult as her underlying depression and bipolar disorder were still present and untreated. At 19, Shaz was introduced to marijuana by a boyfriend, and at 20 she became pregnant to another man she had intended to marry until she discovered he was a heroin user. While she ended the relationship immediately, she went on to have the baby. She credits her son, now 25 and a devoted father himself, with having inspired her to keep going during many a dark hour.
Her son’s preschool years were a period of relative stability during which Shaz’s relationship with her mother improved, she maintained a healthy weight, and stayed drug-free. However she resumed using marijuana when her son was five, and looking back counts herself lucky that he wasn’t taken from her, so lax was her parenting during that time. She also drank heavily at different times over the next twenty years, went through periods of excessive spending, experienced major weight fluctuations and attempted suicide a few times via drug overdoses. The combination of illicit drugs, alcohol, prescription medication, food/dieting, and thrill-seeking was Shaz’s attempt to try to quell the sadness and self-doubt, anxiety and restlessness that continually gnawed away at her. Over the years Shaz has battled anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and significant weight fluctuations, as well as epilepsy and asthma. Shaz takes various medications, including sodium valproate, chlorpromazine, duloxetine, olanzepine, and diazepam.
Recurrent periods of substance abuse and poor nutrition brought with them additional health problems in the form of paranoid schizophrenia, liver disease, and a serious bout of pneumonia. Recently Shaz has successfully quit marijuana and alcohol, and is on the lowest level of prescription medication in many years. She has had a long-term relationship with her psychiatrist and GP and holds them in high regard. Her self-esteem remains fragile and she doesn’t think she will ever recover; from depression, however she has found a measure of acceptance and respect from a number of women friends, enjoys a good relationship with her mother and son, and enjoys being a grandmother. She would like to have a loving relationship with a male partner but in the meantime fills her days with pleasures such as music, craft, and growing orchids.