Depressed Medical Doctor Saved By The Arts!!!
"I thought my career
as a doctor was over. It was the arts that saved me"
As a hospital doctor I am
used to working under pressure, and had always felt I thrived on it.
But when I took time out
of clinical training to pursue a PhD, I found I was intensely unhappy.
I suffered a range of
physical symptoms: palpitations, early morning waking, nausea, severe
headaches, poor appetite, diarrhoea, dizziness, breathlessness and tremors.
My day was constantly
interrupted by intrusive negative thoughts; I once walked for 30 minutes with
“I hate my life, I hate my life” on a loop of internal monologue that I feared
had no end. I listened to podcasts and audiobooks fanatically but could not
drown out these thoughts, and no rationalization of all the wonderful things I
had in my life could make them stop.
Having “depression and
anxiety” branded on my medical file and acquiring a sick certificate came as a
shock. I decided to leave the PhD, but things did not immediately get better.
I was convinced that I had
ruined my career, and my life, and that nothing would ever be the same again. I
felt that everything was pointless and daydreamed about getting a terminal
illness.
I didn’t want to die, but
it no longer seemed like such a threatening possibility, and the option to opt
out was appealing.
I wanted to get better and
get back to a version of myself that I recognized so I sought help from
everywhere I could.
I saw family and friends,
and cried with many of them. I made appointments with my GP, an occupational
health adviser and a career coach.
I was pointed in the
direction of a service specifically for doctors, the NHS Practitioner Health Programme, and embarked
on a course of cognitive behavioural therapy.
I cancelled every
commitment in my diary in an attempt to reset and gain some perspective.
I woke up one morning at
4.30am and realized I had no commitments and no deadlines, and I asked myself:
“What do you want to do today?” The answer, it turned out, was to walk, to
watch, to draw, and to knit.
Creativity is a part of
myself that I had suppressed and ignored, viewing it as an inconsequential,
frivolous hobby.
But giving myself time
away from work, both physically and psychologically, I made space for the
things I love. I sketched and doodled, cut, stuck, sewed, crocheted and
collaged.
As I reaffirmed to myself
that I am more than my work, my internal voices of negativity and fear became quieter
and I started to recognize myself again.
I am now back at work and
so grateful for the help I received. I now rarely have a whole day free to make
salt dough sculptures, or master cable knit, or learn how to rag rug.
But I do have time to take
a photo, to doodle, to complete five knit rows of my latest hat, or to write a
story using only three words.
Taking part in creative
challenges activated a different part of my brain – they
activated a different part of me.
Having
worked hard to restore my positive outlook and some self worth, I am anxious to
prevent a relapse.
I have
made myself a number of promises:
- I will not give all my emotional energy
to work;
- I will take all my annual leave, however
difficult it is to find cover; - I will
say no more often to extra work tasks;
- I will value activities that make me
happy;
- I will make space for creativity every
single week;
- I will schedule art in my diary during
my time off and will not cancel due to work;
- I will continue to talk about how I
feel, as this shows strength not weakness.
By making
time for the things that recharge me, I am now more effective – a better
colleague and a better doctor.
There is growing
recognition that burnout not only harms workers, but also compromises the quality and
safety of healthcare provision.
The Royal College of
Physicians has produced a number of reports demanding leadership and action,
noting that “investment in NHS staff is not an optional extra, but a vital investment
in safe, sustainable patient care”.
There is good evidence for
the effectiveness of the arts in
supporting wellbeing, certainly more evidence than there is for resilience
training. Intelligent organizations would do well to embed
opportunities for arts engagement in career development and staff retention
strategies if they want to maintain productive, compassionate, loyal
workforces.
Whether you like to write,
to draw, to paint, to knit, to carve, to sing, to sew, to jive, to strum, to
film or to yodel, I urge you to value your creativity and make space for it in
your life.
Be kind to yourself, and
stay well. I’ll try to do the same.
Dr Laura-Jane Smith is a
respiratory and general hospital doctor in north-east London.
Source: The Guardian

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