I am angry. I am
angry and I can’t get past it. I am angry and it is not doing me any good. I am
writing this in the hope that it will be cathartic and I’ll stop having
nightmares about the place I used to work at, that I’ll stop being terrified of
not being believed, that I’ll stop thinking about it all the bloody time.
If you’ve read this blog before, you’ll know something of
what I’m going on about and might not want to read anything else about it, so here’s
a Get out of Jail Free card; collect £200 and pass Go without reading any
further. I wouldn’t blame you; I’m sick
to the stomach of the whole thing. If you haven’t read it before, here is a
brief synopsis: I had depression and was signed off work. A nasty, grubby
individual wrote to my employer saying I was faking it and using my tweets as ‘evidence’. My employer investigated me, found me guilty
of misconduct on the basis of my tweets and precious little else and began
disciplinary action. I was suicidal. I
resigned.
I’ve tried so hard to get past it. I cleared my desk on 10th January
this year. Time has gone on and yet I can’t
stop thinking about it. It affects
everything I do. I am so fucking angry.
They knew I was on a waiting list for therapy. They had medical certificates from my GP
stating I had depression. They had
letters from my GP confirming the severity of my illness. They had reports from their own Occupational
Health doctors who having met and examined me on at least three occasions agreed
with my GP’s diagnosis. And yet, on the basis of what I put on Twitter and a
telephone conversation with a different doctor from Occupational Health who I
hadn’t even met, they told me I was a liar. They told me my behaviour was not consistent
with that of someone with depression.
This, from a manager who, by her own admission, had no experience or
understanding of depressive illness.
This from a manager, who, when I said I felt uncomfortable talking
openly to her about my symptoms told me “Stephen Fry talks about his depression…”
This, from a manager who whilst carrying out the investigation into the
veracity of my mental illness, was also appointed as my line manager,
responsible for over-seeing the phased return to work recommended by the
organisation’s Occupational Health doctors. Conflict of interest, much?
Of course, everyone asks why I didn’t take this to an
employment tribunal. I thought about it,
I really did. I sought advice. In the end, I was still too ill. Even though I was told that legally, I had a strong
case. The prospect, however remote, of
being found guilty a second time of something I hadn’t done was just too terrifying. I’d pulled myself back from the brink once; I
knew I couldn’t do it again. It’s too
late now, you only get so long to lodge a complaint with an employment
tribunal, and honestly despite being more mentally healthy now than I have been
in a long while, I don’t think I’d ever be strong enough to fight that battle
again, even if it were an option.
I’m starting a new job soon. I am terrified of it all
happening again. I’ll never be able to
say where I work, or have any public facing role in the new organisation, for
fear of the grubby individual who began all this, sending their nasty poison
pen letters to my new employer as well. I’m not angry with the grubby
individual anymore; they are not worth the effort. They are nothing. I am angry with my old
employer. They knew me. They knew my
past history of depression. They knew I
was good at my job. They knew me. And they called me a liar. And I can’t
forgive them.
I don't know what to say. I just want to (((((hug))))) you because life is so very unfair sometimes.
ReplyDeleteOther people have their own agenda, but it is wrong, wrong, wrong when they destroy someone's health and confidence just to score a miserable little victory.
Take care of yourself. x
Thanks Jan xx
DeleteHey you
ReplyDeleteDon't let someone else's agenda cloud your future. I'm not saying forget it, that's not healthy even if it were possible. You know you were good at your previous job and we both know you're gonna be great at this one too. That's all that matters, the rest is just noise, distracting you from where you want to be. You fought through your illness and made it to a place of relative strength. That's a huge achievement, you now have the opportunity to get back into a job and enjoy it. I know you're going to take it and with the love and support of those around you achieve bigger and better things. You're a sharp cookie, don't let anyone blunt that!
Thank you KatFace xx
DeleteAt some point the anger will go. It has to because anger is incredibly destructive.
ReplyDeleteYes, it is. Thanks for commenting xx
DeletePlease share this with The Elephant - I know you're there! And let some of us Elefriends provide you with some obviously much-needed support.
ReplyDeleteNo, we can't cure anything but a trouble shared IS a trouble halved with most of us!
Hello, yes am going to :) feel a weight has been loaded, just by writing it. xx
Delete