AZ Gull
@SeagullsAcademy @seagullsacademy.bsky.social
What is going on with you these days THPP, you used to be one of the best posters on here?
Blimey, you must have a bloody good memory.
What is going on with you these days THPP, you used to be one of the best posters on here?
I suffer from anxiety - wakes me up at 3am most mornings. I'm just coming to the end of a two week sign off from work due to depression. I assume you probably think I need to man up and stop my "crybaby [sic] fake virtue signalling" ? Really, pack it in - you clearly know eff all about mental illness and how it affects EVERYONE .... regardless of wealth.
Good post.You and your colleagues are also open to mental health issues due to the frequency and importance of your interventions with the people in your care. Both of my stints in healthcare, one at a military hospital 36 years ago, and the one I've recently retired from in dementia care (mainly end of life) ended with what I now know to be "compassion fatigue". Extreme situations are the norm and becoming desensitised is the only way to be able to handle some situations. Your working experience, and mine, are a world away from the experience of an elite athlete, but that really isn't the point. People arrive at a recognition of their own mental health issues via all sorts of avenues, some perceived to be "tough" routes, and others thought of as less so because of their apparent wealth or status. I hope we can reach a point where all cries for help, from whatever direction, can be taken seriously and the appropriate help given. Somehow, I think we're quite a way off that at the moment.
I suffer from anxiety - wakes me up at 3am most mornings. I'm just coming to the end of a two week sign off from work due to depression. I assume you probably think I need to man up and stop my "crybaby [sic] fake virtue signalling" ? Really, pack it in - you clearly know eff all about mental illness and how it affects EVERYONE .... regardless of wealth.
I read post #1 and thought exactly the same.
Shame, the dark side clearly have a better recruitment policy at the moment.
It didn't start with Biles and Mings isn't the latest, not sure why you're picking on them specifically. Naomi Osaka pulled out of the recent French Open and Wimbledon tournaments for similar reasons, and cricket has a long history of players struggling with the mental side of things, from Trescothick and Michael Yardy to Trott and most recently, Ben Stokes. David Bairstow killed himself. Golfer Thomas Bjorn described his mental health battles in his book. Michael Phelps had well documented battles with depression and suicidal thoughts. So did Paul Gascoigne. Other footballers who have described their battles with depression include Buffon, Aaron Lennon, Iniesta, Michael Carrick, Danny Rose and many less well-known players. Robert Enke and Gary Speed both committed suicide, Clarke Carlisle attempted it.
Elite-level sport clearly places huge pressures on individuals, mental toughness is seen as a reason some succeed and others fail. But it appears many people simply bottled up the stresses and suffered from it. Its become OK to talk about it, so they are. Whether it removes the stesses or not, who knows. But always good to talk. The idea that some want to chant abuse at players about their mental health, or think the EPL supporting players talking about it is 'pathetic', shows a severe lack of empathy for our fellow man.
... in this post-Biles era.
'Mental Health' set to replace VAR as the EPL issue of the upcoming season.
Didn't it used to be called what it was? IE the pressure that naturally comes with having to perform at the level of 'elite' sport that pays your million quid wage?
Like Biles, maybe the simple solution is just to switch off your twitter feed?
I suffer from anxiety - wakes me up at 3am most mornings. I'm just coming to the end of a two week sign off from work due to depression. I assume you probably think I need to man up and stop my "crybaby [sic] fake virtue signalling" ? Really, pack it in - you clearly know eff all about mental illness and how it affects EVERYONE .... regardless of wealth.
I suffer from anxiety - wakes me up at 3am most mornings. I'm just coming to the end of a two week sign off from work due to depression. I assume you probably think I need to man up and stop my "crybaby [sic] fake virtue signalling" ? Really, pack it in - you clearly know eff all about mental illness and how it affects EVERYONE .... regardless of wealth.
You and your colleagues are also open to mental health issues due to the frequency and importance of your interventions with the people in your care. Both of my stints in healthcare, one at a military hospital 36 years ago, and the one I've recently retired from in dementia care (mainly end of life) ended with what I now know to be "compassion fatigue". Extreme situations are the norm and becoming desensitised is the only way to be able to handle some situations. Your working experience, and mine, are a world away from the experience of an elite athlete, but that really isn't the point. People arrive at a recognition of their own mental health issues via all sorts of avenues, some perceived to be "tough" routes, and others thought of as less so because of their apparent wealth or status. I hope we can reach a point where all cries for help, from whatever direction, can be taken seriously and the appropriate help given. Somehow, I think we're quite a way off that at the moment.
I don't think for a moment he's lying. I think he's saying what just about every high pressure sportsman must constantly be thinking. All that self-doubt. But Biles made it ok to say so. Just step away from the twitter feed maybe? For every twit that worships you like a god, there will be ten other twits trying to get in your head, trying to wind you up. These GODS are plenty good at wearing their noise-cancelling headphones when stepping off of the team coach. Maybe they should consider extending them into many other parts of their life in the highly-paid spotlight?
the early morning attacks are scary.
I'm so lucky with my employer. They were good with me when anxiety issues returned. The reason I don't have a season ticket at the AMEX anymore is because of panic attacks- and that's before the team start letting leads go..
I envy folk for whom it's not a problem. But until they are stuck in the middle of Bruges one afternoon, and experience feelings of absolute dread, akin to the symptoms of a heart attack, and all this lasts for three hours during which you are found cowering in the corner of a cafe, they will never know.
I used to travel the length and breadth of this country and now I barely leave the area. I have been abroad once in the last 15 years with the help of copious amounts of sedative. I wish I could be 'normal'.
The trigger, a parent's death in 2008. Up until then I didn't know what anxiety was. I kept it quiet until one night I had the worst attack imaginable until I was so desperate I put it in my Facebook feed. A 'coming out' or so to speak. Even then I tried to not be too much bother and not make it too 'look at me' for fear of being seen as an attention seeker. Thankfully a lot of folk, including [MENTION=616]Guinness Boy[/MENTION] , just posted nice messages and it eased off. But you don't forget stuff.
I will admit I get afraid sometimes because I worry that if paranoia was replaced by an actual devastating event that it could send me over the edge. You just don't know this stuff. It's been mild for a while and I hope it stays that way.
I've had the confidence, although in a reserved way, to tell folk around me that I am a bit odd and to let me be so and not worry. It's more of a compromise as I don't want sympathy just a reaction that doesn't make things worse. I had to leave a match at Chelsea after twenty minutes (probably for the best that time...) because my body was like jelly and my pulse rate twice what it should be.
So, yes, seeing a thread like this makes my stomach churn, so I'll throw my story at it and hope that others don't go back into their shell. I'm sure there will be a few folk who buy the badge to attention seek. But that's always going to be the case. Most folk are genuine, and Tyrone Mings has been dealing with stuff for ages. It's those who hurl abuse who are the issue. And if someone thinks it's the other way round then just look at folk who don't have the public profile. How much someone earns is not the issue.
The reason why it seems so common now is because folk ARE opening up. And seeing people concentrate on a few here and there who might take the piss is dangerous. I'm glad I let it all out a while ago because seeing a thread like this started would have sent me back into my shell again.
I do understand your point.
Genuinely in real life and on nsc I have all the time in the world for sufferers. Including wealthy celebs, money’s irrelevant.
Just far less sympathy for footballers, music stars and politicians who broke Lockdown, then mentioned their loved ones and that anguish when caught.
... in this post-Biles era.
'Mental Health' set to replace VAR as the EPL issue of the upcoming season.
Didn't it used to be called what it was? IE the pressure that naturally comes with having to perform at the level of 'elite' sport that pays your million quid wage?
Like Biles, maybe the simple solution is just to switch off your twitter feed?
So you think he’s lying because it’s fashionable?
That makes it worse imo.
We're got this shit Albion song, right, prob other clubs do so also. It goes:
'Cry in a minute
He's going to cry in a minute'
What if that were actually to happen and the guy actually burst into tears in real time and was forced to leave the field of play sobbing?
I think we all know the answer.
So spare me your right-on virtue-signalling shit