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Here is guest blog numero uno, and I’m so honoured that first up is my good mate Heidi Anderson. Perthling’s and Aussies you’d know Heidi either from the H!t929 breakfast show Heidi, Xavier and Ryan or during her time on Big Brother a few years back.
Heidi’s openness about her lived experience with anxiety, battling body image, using alcohol and recreational drugs as a coping strategy continue to help and inspire people all over the world…..me included. Please enjoy. ‘It’s been about two years since I spoke openly about my anxiety and I wanted to let you all know that I am doing ok. In fact, I am doing wonderfully, and I couldn't be more proud of how far I have come. I get asked all the time how I am coping and how I have helped myself. So, I wanted to take this opportunity to thank you all for your support. Thank you! I also wanted to answer some of the questions people constantly have about my mental health and to give some of you hope that might be struggling right now. I was in a really dark place a couple of years ago and, to be honest, I can't even pinpoint what fully caused my spiral. All I know is it was hell and I wouldn't have gotten through it without the support of you, and my friends and family. I got asked to explain to a girlfriend just how my little brain works as she was still struggling to understand anxiety. I told her it’s like jumping on a merry-go-round and every day, going round and round and round and round … haha ok, you get the picture! The irrational thoughts and fears overtake your brain and YOU wholeheartedly believe the stories you’re telling yourself. No-one can convince you otherwise. They can try, but once you’re in that deep, dark place, it can be very hard to get out of it. I have been very lucky. The support and love I have been shown, not just from the Perth community, but around the globe filled my heart with love, and I now know I am not in this alone. Unfortunately, some people still believe they are. So, if this is YOU, then I hope this blog post will inspire you also. I had been suffering for a very long time but I never really understood what was going on. So, I drowned the anxious feeling EVERY weekend with copious amounts of red wine, ciggies and recreational drugs. Anxiety doesn't just disappear and it will never fully go away, but I have learnt to live with it and I now understand it a whole lot better. I solemnly swear that the best thing I ever did for my anxiety was telling people about it. Sharing and accepting my mental illness has been the best thing I have ever done, and I encourage every one of you to do that if you feel the urge. It might not be for everyone, but just sharing my story helped me out of the darkness. I was inundated with messages of support, love and people sharing their own stories from all around the world. People stopped me on the street to speak to me about their anxiety. I was completely overwhelmed with a number of people that had been suffering alone. Opening up means people now understand me. Sometimes I would come across disconnected, not all there, moody, agitated, aggressive and stressed, and people often wondered what they had done wrong. But they had done nothing wrong! My anxiety had taken over my entire body and I was full of fear. It could and would happen in any situation, especially if I was pushed out of my comfort zone, or if I thought I was losing control. Colleagues, friends and family often saw it and just thought “Oh, that’s Heidi,” and the most exhausting part was in every situation like this, I would spend days, sometimes even weeks, beating myself up for the way I reacted. I couldn't win either way. Today is a different story. Now, everyone knows I am an anxious person and they understand my behaviour, and can empathise where I’m coming from and not take things personally. Since I’ve spoken out, I feel like I am no longer hiding anything. So to be honest, my behaviour has changed naturally anyway. The road to where I am now hasn't been easy, but I wouldn't change a thing. I have learnt so much about myself, and anxiety, and I am super excited to share this with you. I thought about medication at times when my brain just wouldn't shut the hell up, and I looked into it, but I heard about some of the side effects and I couldn't deal with having a shitty sex drive, considering I only see my partner every second week as he works away. So for me it wasn't an option. So instead, I chose to tackle my anxiety through all different avenues. Now, some of these might work for you and some of them may not. I have absolutely nothing against medication, you must do what it right for you! My Mum and my best friend (I know, us anxious folk really do stick together) are both medicated and doing really well. For me, as I said, I wanted to try other means. I see a psychologist by the name of Jan, from Masters Psychology, and she has been an absolute godsend, I couldn't have got this far without her. I have also been trying a therapy called Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing (EMDR) and, without getting too technical (Google it), it has really helped me and my anxiety. It was developed in the 1980s to alleviate the symptoms associated with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Since then, however, it has become a widely used and effective technique for other psychological disorders, including various phobias and addiction, as well as PTSD. Meditation has also been a HUGE help and one that I still need to do more of. I constantly find excuses to avoid sitting in silence, but I am getting there and trying to do it a few times a week because when I do, it works wonders! Practicing yoga at ‘Twisting Peacock Yoga’ - http://twistingpeacockyoga.com.au has encouraged me to check-in with myself, and switch off, to seek that peace my brain struggles so hard to find. I have Doterra - www.mydoterra.com/Australia oils burning in the house and I wear an oil called ‘Balance’ every day. Some people may find this really woo-woo, but I guarantee it has helped me in some crazy way! I read lots of articles and books to educate myself on mental health. I also openly share my story now and speak at events, even though this does cause some anxiety, but I figure I am allowed to have it as I’m speaking about anxiety. So, it’s a guaranteed laugh at the beginning! I've done courses and I've surrounded myself with like-minded individuals, such as Julian Pace from ‘The Happiness Co’ - https://happinessco.org where I am now an ambassador, after completing his 21-day course. Additionally, do yourselves a favour, and look up the ‘Brain and Wellness Spa’ https://brainwellnessspa.com.au in South Perth, which is owned and run by Terri Bowman. This therapy is super relaxing and not confronting at all. It’s a bit hard to explain, so I’ll let her website do the talking. Most recently I‘m 78 days into a 90-day sobriety challenge with Sexy Sobriety - www.sexysobriety.com YES ME!! It has been easy, fighting the temptation and being the only sober one when socialising, but it has been so empowering and rewarding. You see for most of last year, I kept hearing a little voice inside me trying to speak, saying I needed to stop drinking but I kept shutting it out. I have since realised that little inner voice was just looking out for my health. Over the Christmas holidays I had a ball but my health wasn’t right and I have been trying to avoid the inevitable by drinking through the pain. I have experienced severe abdominal pain and sickness and if I’m honest with myself, this has been the case for the last few years whenever I drink booze. I’ve had severe bouts of gastritis and it isn't pretty. For many people, giving up alcohol for 90 days would be a walk in the park but for this boozehound, it was a tough one, as I relied heavily on alcohol for my stress relief. 78 days in and already planning on staying sober when I reach the 90-day mark!!! I can’t promise you that any of this will work for you but, what I can promise you, is that there is hope. We’re in this together and you are not alone.’
Thank you for joining me. Please fell free to contact me, to become a guest blogger or provide feedback via email at: The KiltedRogueRunner@outlook.com https://www.beyondblue.org.au Tel: 1300 22 46 36 https://www.lifeline.org.au/ Tel: 133 11 14 https://www.suicidecallbackservice.org.au Tel: 1300 65 94 67 http://www.sirensofsilence.org.au
2 Comments
Donna M
28/3/2018 00:01:04
Cool to hear Heidi’s blog hear first one glad to hear you chose to work thru rather than medicate as you made it that far without it . And you dident mention any hospital eather even in your darkes point you still kept control power to you , I will work on my blog for Jason kilt and all great bloke thanks for starting this . Just shows what can happen to when we can break the silence of our distress and I’d haveto agree people tend to take it personally but when they know it’s all different thanks again
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Hi Donna
3/4/2018 07:03:38
Thanks for your wonderful words and ongoing support, it is much appreciated, Jase ?
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