Darren – Interview 02
Darren is 21 and has experienced depression from the age of 16 for about a year. He has epilepsy and has had brain surgery which made the depression worse. He now experiences occasional low moods, mainly after seizures. Darren enjoys sleeping and drawing cartoons.(White British).
Darren is 21 and has experienced depression on and off since he was about 15. Darren was diagnosed with epilepsy when he was 11. Because of the side effects of his epilepsy medication; acne and shaking, he was bullied at school, even by some of his friends. This all had a big knock on his self-confidence throughout school and into college. Things came to a head when his then best friend ditche him for a new girlfriend and a girl who Darren had met really hurt his feelings. Darren started self-harming and attempted suicide.
After the suicide attempt, Darren was admitted to a psychiatric unit of a local hospital. The stay at the unit was a very unpleasant experience for Darren; he was the only young person there and he says he, Didn’t see very nice things in ther. He was referred onto a psychiatric hospital in London where he stayed for three months. He said he found some of the counselling and psychiatrists helpful but that the group sessions weren’t his thing at all. He made some friends there and he managed to hide a play station in the room for something to do.
Darren’s epilepsy was getting worse and the only epilepsy medication, out of many he;d tried over the years, which helped him made the depression worse so he had to come off it. It was suggested to Darren that brain surgery could help to control the seizures. He was told that one of the possible side effects of the surgery was depression – which is what happened to him straight after the surgery. Three days after the brain surgery, Darren was transferred back into the psychiatric hospital. During this time, he attempted suicide for a second time and then ran away from the hospital. Now looking back on it, Darren says the suicide attempts were just cries for hel.
The seizures came back two years after surgery and are still not controlled but his mood has been better. He’s been on anti-depressants for four years. Until recently he;d been taking them in the evening which caused him severe insomnia and not being able to get to sleep till 5 or 6 am. He was told he’s just a night perso or laz until a doctor finally realised to tell him to take his tablets in the morning, in stead of night time. Darren says the best that would help him would be getting his seizures controlled and finding a job. He’s got a lot of support from his family, has one very good friend and he also does a lot of voluntary work and draws cartoons.