William – Interview 10
William was badly bullied as a child and developed various obsessions and compulsions. He had trouble concentrating and finds working challenging. He now takes Lustral and Quetiapine which he finds helpful but still struggles with feelings of depression.
William was bullied extensively as a child and describes his life as worse’ before contact with mental health services. He thinks he had very severe social anxiety and obsessive compulsive disorder that was undiagnosed. He couldn’t really socialise and missed a lot of school. William thinks that he got his contamination fears in his late teens, but felt compelled towards other kinds of organising and reciting before this. He felt he may also have been bullied by his mother, and says that his mother and father had a very bad relationship.
After school he had a few jobs and had problems concentrating. He was fed up and decided he needed to see a doctor. His Mum asked him Do you want to be viewed as mad?’ and he found all the comments were very negative. William’s GP gave him some pills to take’ and said that psychiatrists were for people that are mentally ill’. William couldn’t properly discuss the constant need to wash, and couldn’t talk about someone on the television that he was obsessed with, for whom he had unrequited feelings. He couldn’t concentrate and found all these things together’ were very difficult.
When he was about 20 he went to a day hospital. He used to hide his washing rituals from view and perform them at home so they said he didn’t have OCD. He said it was invisible and you could cover it up. He was embarrassed about it and thought it was too mad’. For a while he had visual/aural hallucinations which he thought were a reaction to a particular anti-psychotic drug, and he now very occasionally experiences these on waking. Although he doesn’t have experiences that a friend of his (who has psychosis) has, he does believe there is a connection as he feels he lives in a fantasy world’. He was asked about his sexual behaviour by psychiatrists and found this very embarrassing. He fell in love with a trainee psychiatrist at the day hospital and thought about her for about five years, after going to the place for only about four months. William wanted to discharge himself from the day hospital and wanted to have psychotherapy in order to talk about some of these difficult and embarrassing issues, but he wasn’t offered it. He was very depressed. A work rehabilitation centre was suggested to him but he didn’t want to go there. He was given an IQ test by a psychologist and was told he would make a good filing clerk. William felt he couldn’t discuss the development of his sexualised obsessions with any professionals or relatives apart from his cousin, who was of a similar age. He says that he was given anti-psychotics for violent and aggressive thoughts.
William started to realise he might be getting a bad deal’ from services as he believed someone could help him to talk. He complained about his psychiatrist and the psychiatrist wouldn’t see him any more. A psychologist he has since seen thought he had intermittent psychosis and gave him a tentative diagnosis of schizo-affective disorder. William has done assertiveness and personal development courses which have helped. He is now able to talk more about his feelings. He felt that reading self-help books helped a lot. Cognitive behavioural therapy might have had a small effect on his shyness. However cognitive analytical therapy made a dramatic difference’ talking about his feelings and talking to women. He now takes Lustral which helps his anxiety considerably, although he says he can’t beat’ the depression he experiences. He takes anti-psychotics but finds that they make him very drowsy. He would like to have more support.