Harry – Interview 03
Harry, a student, said that he started to do drugs aged thirteen. He started off mainly with cannabis and then skunk just ‘out of curiosity’. He then went on to try ecstasy, mephedrone, MDMA, etc. He was diagnosed with psychosis age nineteen. He doesn’t use drugs anymore.
Harry, a student, started to do drugs at thirteen, mainly cannabis and then skunk just out of curiosity’. He doesn’t think that peer pressure had anything to do with it. When in school, he remembers that out of all his friends, he and his best friendwere the only ones experimenting with illegal substances. His best friendstopped and became anti-drugs, but Harry continued experimenting with different types of substances.
Harry thinks that music has abig effect on the type of drugs people take. He gave the example of dubstep which he associated withketamine more than other substances He thinksthat ecstasy or cocaine are part of the more upbeat club nights. From the age of fifteen he started going to clubs and using class A drugs. On reflection, he regrets using drugs so young because he said his brain was still developing.
At the age of 17 he started to have paranoid episodes but initially he saw those as just a phase he was going through and thoughtthat he would be fine. Eventually he stopped smoking weed and skunk but continue doing ecstasy andMDMA.
Harry’s social life at the time was spent going to raves. There was lots of dancing, chatting and pill taking and very little sleep. Around the same time he was kicked out of boarding school and had to find a college to continue his education.
Harry began to notice that the come downs from the effects of drugs took longer and longer and he was becoming more emotionally affected by the whole process. He was experiencing low self esteem, a sense of helplessness, paranoia. By the end of sixth form he became locked’ in such a mindset. Plus he broke up with his girlfriend. It was not until the summer that he talked to his parents. He said that his parents have been very supportive throughout his mental illness experience.
Diagnosis and treatment were easy to obtain. He went to see his GP and was referred to a psychiatrist who diagnosed him with psychosis. He was put on antipsychotic medication; Aripiprazole. He described his treatment as rebuilding his mind’ but it took a while to kick in. He was put on antidepressants (Venlafaxine) but felt numb and unable to communicate with others. As his symptoms began to improve he went to university to start an Art degree and continue seeing the psychiatrist. In university he relapsed and started doing drugs again until he went on holidays and realised that he was on a self-destructive course and that he had to stop for good. Harry is still on treatment and will continue for another two more years. His psychiatrist told him that as long as he doesn’t do any more drugs he will be fine.