The article centers on Freddie Flintoff's experience with PTSD and anxiety following a near-fatal car accident, using his story to illustrate how individuals cope with trauma. It highlights Flintoff's feelings of 'passive suicidal ideation,' a common response to major life changes, emphasizing that such feelings, while distressing, don't necessarily indicate active suicidal intent.
The article emphasizes the importance of supportive communication with loved ones experiencing trauma. It suggests that providing calm reassurance and avoiding dismissing their feelings is crucial, even when hearing those feelings is difficult. It advises against trying to solve their problems or offer immediate solutions, instead focusing on acknowledging their pain and offering unwavering support.
The role of Freddie's wife, Rachael, is also discussed. Her approach of remaining strong and outwardly optimistic, despite her internal distress, is presented as a model of effective support for those going through crises.
The article briefly touches on the Supreme Court's ruling on sex and gender, criticizing politicians, charities, and institutions for failing the transgender community. It also highlights the inadequate support system for teenagers with cancer, advocating for age-appropriate wards and improved care.
Finally, it mentions a new AI-powered blood test for cancer detection, while simultaneously emphasizing the continued importance of compassionate, personalized care within healthcare.
If you havenāt watched the Disney+ documentary about Freddie Flintoffās horrific car crash while filming Top Gear in 2022, then Iād really recommend it. Itās an edifying lesson in how an individual copes with something truly traumatic and the complex feelings and emotions which swirl around such an event.
Freddie said he experienced PTSD and anxiety after the accident, in which he nearly died and I have to say, Iām not surprised. It must have been an unimaginably tough experience and he still bears the physical, let alone the psychological, scars from it to this day.
Most of us will never experience something quite as devastating. But many of us ā probably all, if Iām honest ā will experience major difficulties and upsets in our lives at one time or another. Freddieās is an extreme, harrowing example, but there are still lessons I think the programme teaches us about coping with adversity.
I was particularly interested in the way he responded psychologically.
āThis sounds awful... part of me wishes Iād been killed,ā he said, and āpart of me thinks, I wish Iād have died. I didnāt want to kill myself. I wonāt mistake the two things.ā
This feeling of wishing you were dead is incredibly common, especially when you have been faced with a dramatic, distressing change in circumstances. The more powerless you feel in the situation or during the aftermath, the more likely it is youāll experience this.
I was interested to hear about how Freddieās wife Rachael coped with the accident, writes DR MAX PEMBERTON
Psychiatrists call this āpassive suicidal ideationā. This is different to āactive suicidal ideationā, where people have thoughts about killing themselves and may even have a plan on how they would do it. Instead, passive suicidal ideation is a wish to be dead. While you donāt intend to take your own life, you no longer want to live. Itās much more common than the active type. For Freddie, this thought was prompted by the aftermath of the crash, but it is not always triggered by something so dramatic.
I have spoken to hundreds of people with passive suicidal ideation over the years. Many feel similarly after a divorce, losing their job or any other upsetting event which leaves them feeling scared, alone or no longer feeling that there is purpose or meaning in life.
They all stress that they arenāt going to kill themselves. But they often describe how if they went to sleep and didnāt wake up, theyād be happy.
Itās extremely upsetting to hear someone you love talk like this. However, asking about it and talking about it doesnāt increase the risk of them taking their own life ā it actually decreases the risk.
If you find yourself in a conversation like this with a loved one, you may find yourself trying to find an answer ā to provide a silver lining ā but resist this. You can still offer support, and care, but donāt try to dismiss their feelings just because theyāre difficult for you to hear.
Psychotherapists talk of āsittingā with a feeling: talking about it, thinking about it, experiencing it and feeling it, but resisting the temptation to try to change it. Simply acknowledging that someone is having this feeling and being with them while they go through it, accepting itās valid, can be very powerful and helps it to dissipate over time.
Freddie said he experienced PTSD and anxiety after the accident, in which he nearly died
I was also interested to hear about how Freddieās wife Rachael coped with the accident, particularly when she saw him for the first time in hospital after his initial five-hour operation. āI totally pulled myself together and I didnāt cry,ā she revealed. āI just said, āItās fine. Youāre gonna be OK. Canāt believe how amazing you look.ā
āBefore I got home, I did call the kids and said to them, āYouāve got to be as strong as youāve ever been. I donāt want you to look shocked and horrified, because thatās going to knock himā.ā
You might feel that this is being dishonest, but Iād say Rachael took precisely the right tack. Crying and wailing and saying how dreadful something is will only make the person at the centre of the crisis feel worse.
Even if you do want to cry and you really do think something is dreadful, it wonāt help the victim. They need you to be strong. Yet itās astonishing how often friends and loved ones try to make a tragedy about them. They cry and make a scene, when this is the last thing the person needs. This will often push the individual into either not being honest about how they feel, because they fear those around them wonāt be able to cope with anything else negative, or they have to console others and worry about them, when all the focus should be on the one going through the trauma.
Iāve seen this with people who have been diagnosed with cancer. They end up consoling their family and everyone seems to forget the person who really needs their comfort.
You donāt have to be Pollyannaish about things. You can be honest, but you should remain hopeful and calm. This is what people need when they are going through a crisis.
The Supreme Courtās ruling that sex refers to the sex someone was born with is a win for basic biology. Iām relieved thereās now clarification and common sense has prevailed.
However, I do think it must have been upsetting and unnerving for a lot of trans people. I donāt blame them, or the court. I blame the weak, spineless politicians, who have kicked this issue down the road and repeated the lie that trans women are women, without bothering to think it through.
I also blame charities which were so ideologically blinkered that they didnāt use their position to lobby for better facilities for trans people to use.
The finger of blame should also be pointed at gutless institutions like the NHS which repeatedly conflated and confused sex and gender. It has meant a whole generation has been fed a lie. Itās politicians, charities and institutions which failed in their jobs that are responsible for this mess and owe the trans community a grovelling apology.
Sarah Ferguson, who is patron of the Teenage Cancer Trust, has highlighted the situation that young sufferers can be left to cope either on adult wards or childrenās wards, when there should be places tailored to their age group. I worked on a teenage cancer ward. Before they had come to us, many had been on adult wards, often with much older people, where they struggled. Worse, though, was when they had been on paediatric wards. The little children had parents staying with them, while the teenagers didnāt, which compounded how alone they felt. The Duchess of York is right to shine a light on the problems this group face.
Adults in an NHS trial will be offered a new blood test which uses AI and can detect 12 known cancers. Itās a great use of tech but thereās a lot still to be said for good old- fashioned care and itās this that desperately needs to be improved.
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