In July 2017, I took a week off work for what I told my boss I thought might be glandular fever.
I didn’t have glandular fever.
Physically, there was nothing wrong with me, but for five mornings in a row, I pressed send on the same text message saying I was too ill to come into the office.
The text messages that allowed me to stay in bed with the curtains drawn were like putting Band Aids on a burn – ‘being sick’ was only a short term solution to a much deeper problem.
I knew what the problem was. I Googled psychologists and councillors in my area, a place that was new to me at the time. I emailed a free national mental health service, only to receive an emotionless, perhaps automated, response saying I needed to contact someone else during specific opening hours.
It felt too hard. And expensive. Picking up the phone and making an appointment isn’t laborious or complicated, but at the time, living interstate away from family and friends, going to the doctors to get another sick certificate felt easier.
A week off work meant going to the cheapest GP clinic I could find in my area (I didn’t want to go to a bulk billing medical centre because I didn’t want to be out of the house for too long). The waiting room was dingy and under construction. The light pink paint was peeling off the walls and the subtitles on the TV in the corner were 30 seconds behind.
I’ll only need one day off, I told the GP the first time. I was sure I’d go back tomorrow. It wasn’t until I came back two days later for another sick certificate, and after practising my cough and croaky voice, that I ‘came clean’ and explained to the doctor what was really going on.