Jennie – Interview 21
Jennie is a 19-year-old-university student. She’s always been a perfectionist and around the age of 15, when doing her GCSEs, the pressures at school were all mounting up and she started to feel more and more depressed. To try and control these feelings, Jennie stopped eating. Jennie was referred to CAMHS where she had counselling for a couple of years. It didn’t help her that much but has since found a helpful CBT focussed counselling service.
Jennie is 19 and studies fulltime at university. Jennie says she’s always been a perfectionist, wanting to do everything to the best of her potential and putting a lot of pressure on herself. When she moved into Year 10 and was coming up to her GCSEs, the pressures were mounting up, she was crying all the time, feeling depressed and Jennie started to think something was wrong. She says she couldn’t figure out why she was feeling so depressed all the time and started to control the emotions by stopping eating.
After a while, a concerned friend of Jennie’s contacted her parents to tell them she wasn’t eating properly. Jennie says she is glad that her friend intervened and that she really wanted to get all the help she could. Her mum who’s in health care contacted a colleague at CAMHS and got Jennie referred straightaway. Jennie saw a psychologist for over two years but says it didn’t help her that much. The difficulty for her was that the counselling was heavily focused on the reasons for her feeling depressed or down and Jennie says she simply didn’t know why she was feeling the way she was. Not knowing the reason‚when everybody asks you why‚it’s really frustrating. Jennie says one the most important things she’s learnt is that you don’t need to know a reason for feeling depressed but you can just focus on things that help you feel better.
After Jennie was discharged from CAMHS she found a counselling service focusing on cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) which has been great. She says consciously changing her negative thinking patterns has been really really difficult, but in time, she’s noticed that trying to see the positive side to things has actually helped her feel more positive.
Jennie has a boyfriend who’s learnt how to deal with her bad days or knows when to leave her alone. Jennie is also really close with her family who’ve been a great support for her. She enjoys netball and dancing and says that sometimes she needs to drag herself from studying and work and just to do something fun and enjoyable.