Emma Jane – Interview 38
Emma Jane is a fulltime university student. In college, she started feeling low and that ‘everything was pointless. On the outside though, Emma Jane appeared bubbly and full of life; she says she didn’t want to burden others with her worries. Eventually, a friend encouraged Emma Jane to go to a GP who did diagnose her with depression. Emma Jane tried antidepressants for a while but didn’t get much help from them. Counselling; being able to talk about her feelings to someone impartial has been t
Emma Jane is 20 and a fulltime psychology student. When in college Emma Jane started feeling really low and like everything was just pointles. Emma Jane didn’t want to tell anyone about how she was feeling because she didn’t want to burde others with her worries, or make them feel they had to look after her. She was more worried about others; wellbeing and making sure everyone else was OK before even thinking about herself. On the outside, Emma Jane was very social and outgoing, bubbly and her friends called her Smiley Emm. On the inside, she felt like a totally different person and she felt the pressure of not being able to live up to others; expectations. Emma Jane kept feeling that she was just being dramati and that her worries weren’t substantial enough to warrant the attention of other.
When a friend of Emma Jane’s confided in her about her self-harming, for the first time ever, Emma Jane opened up about her feelings of depression and that she;d also been self harming. Her friend encouraged her to go to see her GP. Emma Jane said the biggest obstacle for her to seek help had been feeling like she;d be wasting the doctor’s time and that there were other people who needed and deserved the help more than her. Going to the GP was a good experience for Emma Jane. The GP diagnosed Emma Jane with depression and also prescribed her with antidepressants. The diagnosis was a relief for her and helped her realise that the depressive feelings she;d had for years weren’t something that everyone had.
Emma Jane started counselling and says it’s been one of the best thing for her; suffering in silence is the worst thing you can d. Having someone outside the friendship group to talk t and give advice to her has been invaluable. Emma Jane says she will sometimes self medicat by drinking alcohol, if she’s feeling down or nervous. She says while on antidepressants, it’s not a good idea to drink but now that she’s not on medication anymore drinking alcohol is just a part of her Uni lifestyle and social life.
Emma Jane says depression is something she;ll be dealing with for the rest of her life. She says there’s a distinct difference between coping and livin with depression and that she wants to live life to the full; to take life by the horns and go with i.