This weekend Stan Collymore took the brave step of tweeting about his experience
of depression which struck a cord with many people, not least with me. He writes eloquently and honestly and I found
it a painful thing to read, chiming as it does with my own ongoing health.
Speaking up about mental health is frightening for anyone, especially
as you anticipate there might be a negative reaction from some people, but I
can’t imagine how it must feel if you've got well-documented incidence of adultery
and domestic violence attached to your name.
Not being a football fan, I have to admit these incidences
passed me by, or at least I don’t remember the press coverage from 1998 and
2004, so when I tweeted earlier today “I might love Stan Collymore” I was taken
aback to discover these things in his past and the subsequent
implication that because of these things I ought to think differently about
what Stan is doing. It made me pause. Can I really respect a man who cheated on
his wife and beat up his girlfriend? Well yes, I can. I’m not condoning what he did, of course I’m
not, but do I have faith in the idea that people can change, regret and repent
for their actions? Of course I do. What kind of a world would we be in if our
entire personality and moral code was based on the very worst examples of
them? I doubt any of us would come up
smelling of roses. Just because you’ve
done bad things in your past doesn’t mean you should not be valued and
supported for the good things you do in the future.
To publically discuss
your depression on TalkSport radio and
write about it when right in the middle of a bout is hugely commendable and an important
step forward in the public comprehension of such a prolific and misunderstood
illness.
The overwhelming majority of people I see tweeting about
what Stan wrote are people who either have suffered depression themselves or
know someone who has, and this gives me real hope that with time, and the bravery
of fellow sufferers famous or otherwise, we will someday reach a point where
mental health is no longer stigmatised and we who suffer are given the
compassion we warrant and deserve.
I'm sure we've all done things we're not proud of, and I certainly wouldn't want to make light of his past - I would prefer to focus now on the good he's done by sharing his experience. Anything which lessens the stigma of mental health, and makes people feel less isolated is a good thing. I hope that being open about it help him, too.
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