Mind Magazine July 2017 Mind Magazine July 2017 | Page 8

Real-life inspiration I thought that, when I finally came out, all my mental health issues would be behind me, but of course that didn’t happen. ‘Every time it happened I said to myself, “This is the last time, I’m not going back that low again”. But of course, it doesn’t work that way. ‘The loneliness of the depression was gut-wrenching,’ he remembers. ‘You have a void that nothing can fill.’ Getting a diagnosis Finally, Jaabir’s GP sent him for a formal assessment with the mental health crisis team, and his BPD was diagnosed. ‘On one hand, I found it a great relief,’ he says, ‘because the pattern I’d been in could be explained and maybe I could get treatment to deal with it on a long-term basis. ‘But, on the other hand, I felt quite disempowered – how limited was I going to 8 Mind Magazine be? Was this just how I’d always feel; was this just me now? And the name makes you feel that there’s something inherently wrong with your personality.’ Digging deep Jaabir also found that getting the diagnosis was only the beginning of a longer process, and there were deep-rooted issues in his life he was going to have to address. ‘Problems with my identity have always been mixed in with the mental health issues – I’ve been hiding the fact that I’m gay all my life, until just a few years ago. I thought that, when I finally came out, all my mental health issues would be behind me, but of course that didn’t happen.