Robert – Interview 19

Robert had a ‘normal’ childhood, but his father died when he was 15. Later, he started using methamphetamine, which damaged his mental health, and he started hearing voices and sleeping on the streets. He now lives in the South West with his partner who supports him.

Robert describes his childhood as quite normal really’. He went to a Catholic school. Robert’s father died pretty much in [his] arms; then, after that, he didn’t bother much with school’. His Dad had had a nervous breakdown’ and had a lot of mental health issues himself; he had spoken to Robert about receiving ECT. He got into drugs and started drinking. When he was living in another town he did a lot of methamphetamine, and was walking around the streets and hearing voices. However his partner was there to look after him, and he moved away. He says he has been lucky because he has been a strong person, but the doctor was the last person he wanted to see’ as the risk of getting sectioned was too much. He just bared with it’.

Robert doesn’t do methamphetamine now but he is still feeling the effects. Robert thinks the deaths of people close to him made it easier to fall into drugs. His father and daughter died in very distressing circumstances. He drank heavily and did drugs to try and get his head around it’. He used to drink, get in fights and end up in jail. He thinks that sometimes jail works by getting you drink-free and drug-free. He couldn’t be bothered to cope with everyday things, and lost a couple of jobs because he just couldn’t do them.

It was when he went to a mental health unit in the South West that he put two and two together’ and worked things out’ and realised what was happening in [his] head’. He could see his mental health getting worse and worse’. When he first heard voices they didn’t really mean a lot’ but now, looking back, they were scary’. At the time he didn’t care. He spent days sleeping on the street, as he felt trapped by the voices when he was inside. In the end he moved and started again’. He is also scared of people’s reactions, and has found that a lot of people won’t talk to him because of the mental health issues. He has also found that a GP was intimidated by talking about mental health issues, and called him a liar’ when he discussed hearing voices. After this incident he didn’t see a doctor for nearly two and a half years, and doesn’t talk to doctors he doesn’t know about hearing voices. He is now with an older doctor, whom he expected to be more prejudiced, but he is better. He considered putting in a complaint against the first doctor, but felt that, because of the drugs and mental health history he had, he wouldn’t be taken seriously. Later he went to a unit that specialised in mental health and found them easier to get on with’. There he spoke with a psychiatrist who was really helpful, but they didn’t have the time’ and just prescribed you drugs. He hasn’t seen a doctor for two to three years. The tablets [Risperidone] helped a lot, although it seems that the longer he has been taking the tablets the less effective they are. They cut a lot of the voices out, and he isn’t as jumpy’ or paranoid’ as he used to be. However the voices are still there’ and some days are worse than others.

Robert finds that because of the reaction of other people to mental health issues he prefers to stay with his partner, and doesn’t go out much. He says that without his partner he probably wouldn’t have survived’ mental health problems. He could check with her what was real, and was with her 24 hours a day. It is especially difficult when he goes out, as he thinks people are saying things about him, and she has to reassure him that they aren’t. He finds that there aren’t many people with whom you can sit down and talk about mental health.

He describes drugs as the biggest mistake [he] ever made’. Cannabis he describes as his biggest weakness, although he says that it is amphetamine that was worse as it gets in your head’. You don’t have much control over things. He would go without sleeping or eating for 6-7 days. At worst he was 6’3 and 9 ¬¨¬®≈í¬© stone. He likes the housing worker, with whom he gets on really well’; this person has helped him sort out his debts. He has really struggled with money. He can’t afford to go to the dentist yet has very bad oral health. He finds it difficult to stick with the methadone, and wants to pick a drugs worker who has some personal experience of drugs. He also finds that drugs workers struggle with mental health issues. When he does heroin it stops a lot of [his] problems with the mental health’, as although it doesn’t stop the voices it makes him not care’. The only issue he has with heroin is the expense’.

Now he has his own place, with support from a drugs project, and life is a lot better. He can go out a lot more than he used to; he can go up to the chemist most days, and things are quite rosey’. With mental health some days are a little bit worse than others.

Robert and his partner talk about how important support from her has been when he hears voices.

Age at interview 45

Gender Male

Age at diagnosis 43

Robert thinks that his dad’s death, his own drug taking and his daughter’s death in distressing…

Age at interview 45

Gender Male

Age at diagnosis 43

Looking back Robert can see that the start of his mental health problems was when he was getting…

Age at interview 45

Gender Male

Age at diagnosis 43

Robert’s voices were so bad indoors that he felt he had to live on the streets, although he was…

Age at interview 45

Gender Male

Age at diagnosis 43

Robert’s mental health deteriorated dramatically when he started talking methamphetamine.

Age at interview 45

Gender Male

Age at diagnosis 43

Robert was shocked by the reaction of a younger GP, and changed to another GP who had much more…

Age at interview 45

Gender Male

Age at diagnosis 43