Holly – Interview 18
Holly is 18 and studying at college. Around the age of 12 things started going wrong for Holly; she was missing school and having behavioural problems. Home life was also difficult as her parents were going through a difficult divorce. Holly was referred to CAMHS for counselling and later on also spent a month on a ward. Since then Holly’s felt much better and stronger to go back to college and is now able to plan ahead into the future. (White British).
Holly is 18 and a college student. Holly used to be a happy school girl, a model daughte and top of her class. Around the age of 12 things changed, and Holly started getting into the habit of not doing her work, getting kicked out of her lessons and her grades started slipping. Around this time, Holly’s parents were going through a difficult divorce and she says, It was world war III at hom. Over the next couple of years, Holly started to feel more depressed and she also started self harming.
Holly herself didn’t notice the change in herself but the school picked up on it and referred her to CAMHS. Holly went for family counselling which didn’t help her much at all at the time and her family got discharged. Because Holly was still self harming and now also feeling suicidal she was referred back to CAMHS some time later. This time round she got a great counsellor who helped her a lot and she also spent a month on a psychiatric ward. This gave Holly a break from all the complications at home, time to think things through and she had people around ready to help and listen at any time. After she was discharged from the ward, Holly saw the counsellor as an outpatient for a while and has since been completely discharged.
Holly was very recently diagnosed with dyslexia. She says if it had been diagnosed earlier she could have gotten help for her school work and studies – she often felt like she wasn’t doing as well as other members of her family. Holly is also currently going through an assessment to see if she might be diagnosed on the autism spectrum, and she says she’s probably got Asperger’s syndrome. It would explain a lo Holly says; she always had difficulty reading people’s emotions or knowing how to behave in some social situations.
At the moment Holly is at college and loves it. it’s made a big difference to change from sixth form school to a college where everyone is out of their own choice, and is also a bit more mature. The college staff know about Holly’s depression and past experiences and have been really supportive of when she needs a bit more extra time, for example. Holly says she can finally look forward to her future; she’s looking into university courses and planning to move away from home at some point. Holly says that help for depression is out there but that it’s a long process which takes time and patience. it’s also really important to try and find a counsellor with whom you feel able to talk about things; if it doesn’t work with the first one, it doesn’t mean it never wil.