I'm Spartacus
Yesterday morning, I awoke with an all-too-familiar feeling.
I’d worked a 55-hour week, running a 3-day event for new students arriving in
the UK for the first time from 82 countries. On the Wednesday morning, they had
never met; by the Friday evening, they packed out the student bar, where I left
them singing a raucous version of Let It Go together. It was a lovely feeling.
On Saturday, I paid the price. I woke up feeling as though I was drowning, and
that I did not have the energy to tread water. The flood engulfing me whispered
“I’m an unnecessarily pretentious and overly-laboured metaphor for depression, and I will
never be far away.” I went back to sleep and didn’t get up until 3.
I have, to my surprise, had absolutely no negative responses
to this new set, despite its being a little close to the line in places. On the
contrary, the positive reaction I’ve had has felt overwhelming. The first time
I did a full set on these issues was at a competition, and it got me through to
the final. At the final itself, a woman threw her arms around me as we waited
for the toilet. “I’ve seen your set twice and oh my God it’s so true!” she
said, and proceeded to list for me the different antidepressants she’d tried.
Later on, I got an equally positive but far more restrained reaction, as a big lad
with tattoos came up to me, gave me a manly pat on the shoulder and said “the
mental health stuff. Yeah. Just want to say, I have depression too. Nice one,
mate.” After I posted the video on Facebook, I received both positive comments
and private messages from friends and acquaintances. One was from a
schoolfriend I haven’t seen for many years, telling me that my talking about
depression so openly had really helped her, as she suffered herself but hid it
from colleagues at work – I had had no idea she had suffered from it, and like
me she has, on the surface, an “active” life; another took it as their cue to
try standup themselves; a third asked me for some advice as she had just
started taking the drugs I’d joked about in the set. Some commented openly that
they had depression too – another, sort of cyber “I’m Spartacus” moment.
The experience of talking openly about mental health has been incredibly liberating and rewarding, as well as unexpectedly moving. If I’ve helped even one person, that’s an amazing feeling. If I’ve just made people giggle a bit, well that’s fine, because that’s what standup is meant to do. Either way, I Am Spartacus, and I now know I’m not alone.
Depression and its sidekick Anxiety, Mental Health’s Bonnie
to its Clyde, have been a constant presence in my life for many years. Even when I’ve been completely free
from them they’ve been there, skulking behind a hedge patiently waiting for a weak
moment in which they can pounce. As I’ve become more open about it, and as I
have become more involved, as part of my job, with others who suffer similar
problems, I’ve not, as I hoped, witnessed a growing understanding and
awareness. Where I’ve no doubt we are, as a society, becoming more confident
and more knowledgeable on mental health issues, far more often I have witnessed
evidence of fear, misunderstanding and even downright discrimination.
Most recently, I was told by someone in a position of some
authority that I can’t have depression,
as I have a lot of hobbies and a social life. “If you had depression,” she asserted
confidently, “you wouldn’t be doing these things. Depression has a significant
effect on your everyday life.” I ought to get round to telling my doctor this,
lest he continues to prescribe me antidepressants, or indeed telling my brain,
wide awake and racing at 3am with illogical fears, that it shouldn’t have the
audacity to believe this is a symptom of a wider condition.
It is because of these experiences that I’ve started –
tentatively, at first, but now wholeheartedly – to talk about mental illness in
my standup. Encouraged by a very positive reaction – the I’m Spartacus moment Imentioned in my last post – I now have a ten-minute set dedicated entirely to
discussing mental health. I acknowledge this doesn’t sound immediately hilarious
(I open my gigs now by saying “I suffer from depression, which is always a
promising start to a comedy set”, then joke that audiences tend to laugh out of
fear of what I might do if they don’t) but, as with everything in life, there
is humour to be found in mental illness, if only we have the confidence to
bring it out into the open. It is amusingly ironic, for example, that the side
effects of the tablets I take can include “excess sweating” and “excess wind”
(implying, perhaps, that there is an optimum level of flatulence to which we
should all be aspiring), yet they are prescribed, amongst other things, for
social anxiety, a condition probably not helped by persisting farting
accompanied by the smell of body odour. It is darkly comical, in a Darwin Award
sort of a way, that, of the 30 or so people who fall to their deaths from
Beachy Head each year, 1-2 fall off accidentally whilst hilariously pretending
to jump for a photo opportunity. It is, I remark, typical that Beachy Head
itself is only the world’s second most popular suicide spot, because America
ALWAYS has to go one better than us, as they have done here with the Golden
Gate Bridge.
The experience of talking openly about mental health has been incredibly liberating and rewarding, as well as unexpectedly moving. If I’ve helped even one person, that’s an amazing feeling. If I’ve just made people giggle a bit, well that’s fine, because that’s what standup is meant to do. Either way, I Am Spartacus, and I now know I’m not alone.