Sian – Interview 12
Sian is 18 and living independently in supported housing. At a young age, she developed an eating disorder and has also experienced depression and self-harming. Sian was put in care where she lived for a few years. During a stay in a psychiatric unit Sian met two girls who’ve become very close friends since. Sian says getting better is a long process where you have to want to be helped. (White British).
Sian is 18 and working fulltime. She started hearing voices at the age of 10 and was also badly bullied in school. From the age of 8, Sian started developing an eating disorder and was later diagnosed with both anorexia and bulimia. She says she was never a big child but was still bullied for her size in school. She started skipping meals to try and control her life through not eating. Sian stayed in a few different hospitals but things were just getting worse for her. Sian was also self-harming and says she was trying everything to hurt mysel. To stop her self-harming in the psychiatric unit, she was physically restrained. She says it was an awful experience and she felt like the people trying to help her were in fact just controlling her.
Sian was placed in care and first lived in a secure unit and then moved to a children’s home. Now she’s living independently, with support whenever she needs it. Sian says she’s had really positive experiences of being care and it helped her a lot. She says it was one big famil and gave her a lot of positive experiences and opportunities she otherwise wouldn’t have had.
When in the local psychiatric unit, Sian met Mandy (see Interview 11) and Frankie (seeInterview 13). The girls developed a very close bond during the months they stayed in the same unit and have stayed friends ever since. They stay in touch regularly and refer to each other as sister. They all say that getting to know each other was the biggest help they got, both in and out of hospital. During their stay in the hospital, the girls got to know each other’s moods, knew when to support each other and when to leave each other have the space to have their own time. They say they kept each other sane in the most insane way.
Sian says that to get better, you;ve got to accept things and have to want to be helpe and will only then things will get a whole lot easier. She says it can be really frustrating because you can’t just snap your fingers and be all over wit. it’s a long working process
For more fromSian see her Group Interview 11-13.