Alice – Interview 03
Alice was diagnosed by a psychiatrist with severe depression a year ago. She has suffered from anxiety for most of her life, and depression since her mid to late thirties. She has managed her mental health with the aid of anti-depressants, counseling, and support from friends and family (previously her mother and now her children) as well as various health professionals over time. Alice currently takes antidepressant medication (venlafaxine) which she finds to be helpful.
Alice experienced anxiety and fear throughout her often precarious childhood and adolescence, feelings that would haunt her throughout her life. This was largely a result of the stress associated with growing up in New Guinea with a severely disabled brother whose needs eclipsed her own, an absent father (away working) and a mother who survived three bouts of melanoma. Alice’s mother also had to cope with the death of one baby daughter and a stillbirth as well as a disabled child.
In addition, despite Alice’s mother’s encouragement and support, her father repeatedly tried to dampen his daughter’s academic ambitions suggesting she aim for vocations such as teaching or nursing, and discouraging any pride in her achievements. In Alice’s view, this together with her own efforts to not further burden her parents by misbehaving led to a tendency as an adult to set herself impossibly high standards, and to routinely place the needs and interests of others ahead of herself.
In addition, she had to grapple with the significant challenge of single motherhood (of five children) after her marriage broke down, while completing her tertiary studies and trying to establish her career. Throughout her life, Alice’s mother had been her greatest supporter, and so her death when Alice was 40 came as a great blow. In her words, it forced her to grow up;. However, the journey has not been an easy one. Initially she felt incapable of processing the loss of her mother, let alone confronting the anxiety, depression and anger that was gradually undermining any sense of happiness or stability. For a decade or more, Alice continued working and mothering, managing to maintain her job and her social network, and propping herself up with a series of different antidepressants, counsellors, alcohol, and a voracious reading habit. A new relationship begun during this period had little prospect of surviving, and brought with it fresh unhappiness. It was not until issues at work a year ago finally prompted her to seek a formal diagnosis of and treatment for her mental health problems.
This has proven an enormously positive step for Alice. She has stuck with the process of trying to sort out her medication regimen, and is now on a medication and dosage that work well. She is consciously trying to become more assertive, confident and accepting of herself, enjoys mature and supportive relationships with her friends and children, and is able to turn to them for honest advice and help when needed. She doesn’t believe one is able to ever recover from depression, however now knows that with the right support, it is still possible to enjoy life.