‘The voices in my head became more and more insidious. On that Tuesday, I was told to go to the bathroom, sit in the bath, and harm myself.’
Trigger warning: What follows is a first-person account of breakdown including the graphic description of psychosis and self-harm. If you should ever need to talk to someone about your own or another’s mental health, call Lifeline on 13 11 14. If a life is in danger, call the emergency services on 000.
There’s a Camus quote that runs “Should I kill myself, or have a cup of coffee?”
One Tuesday morning, I ran out of coffee.
My relationship with the public mental health sector got serious two weeks before. I went to my regular psychologist appointment presenting with psychosis: hearing voices, seeing things that aren’t there, blacking out and losing time, etc., etc. As a trade-off for refusing to get in an ambulance should she call one, I allowed my psychologist to ring the crisis team from the local public hospital. They agreed to see me the next morning.
My mother polished the dining room table. I wondered if I should offer them tea when they arrive, or pack in case they take me away. I threw an Evelyn Waugh novel in an overnight bag. That would do.
The crisis team was less than helpful. At that stage I wasn’t experiencing thoughts of self-harm, and as soon as I reported as such, they tuned out. I was instructed to stay on my current medications and wait six months to see if there was a change. I would later find out that the team recorded “eccentric personality” as the suspected cause of my hallucinations. They didn’t want any tea.