When I sought help for crippling invasive thoughts, I was told I had a disease like any other. But I wasn’t able to recover until I understood the fallacy at the heart of mental healthcare

Six years ago, I sat halfway up a spiral staircase in an old medical library in London, watching an actor recreate one of the most intense moments of my life. We were filming a TV drama based on a memoir I’d written about my struggles with disturbing sexual and violent intrusive thoughts.

The story had started when, aged 15, I was suddenly bombarded by relentless, maddening doubts about core aspects of my identity: my capacity for violence and abuse, my physical appearance, my sexuality, whether I could trust my bones not to break. Graphic, unbearable thoughts and images started looping in my mind, thousands of times a day. I had no language for my devastating anxiety, or for my shame, so I kept it all a secret for 12 years.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Judge blocks Donald Trump’s effort to countersue rape accuser E Jean Carroll

New York judge accuses ex-president of ‘bad faith’ in tactics that would…

Trump endorses Pence’s brother after sparring with ex-vice-president

Endorsement for Congress comes after Mike Pence rejected Trump’s claim that he…

WHO chief: waive Covid vaccine patents to put world on ‘war footing’

Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus says he supports patent waiver to help countries…

A&E crisis leaves patients waiting in ambulances outside hospitals for 11 hours

Doctors say casualty departments are on the ‘edge of a precipice’, leading…