Warning: This article contains information about suicide which may be distressing for some readers.
1. “I felt there was nothing else out there for him”. Two years ago, Yvette Nichol attempted to take her disabled son’s life.
For more than three decades, 63-year-old Yvette Nichol had been the primary carer for her autistic and epileptic son. In May 2016, she had “reached breaking point” and attempted to end both her and her son’s life.
In a new interview with 60 Minutes Australia, the Melbourne mum has shared just what was going through her mind when she made the harrowing decision to attempt their suffering.
Watch Yvette tell her story on 60 Minutes Australia:
For more than 10 years, since her 50th birthday, Yvette had been worrying about what would happen to her son when she was no longer around to care for him.
“There weren’t homes as in, nursing homes. If you have a mother or father you’re caring for, you get brochures of the nursing homes,” she told 60 Minutes reporter Liz Hayes. “There was no brochures for him.”
Then, a year before the fateful night, Yvette’s marriage broke down and her husband left. Following the split, her then 33-year-old son’s behaviour worsened and he began experiencing frequent and severe night terrors, which kept Yvette up for hours on end.