Your free stamps!
Pick up issue 82 of PaperCrafter to receive your FREE stamps!
Beccy Holiday from Kent suffers from Panic Disorder and Generalised Anxiety Disorder – but crafting has truly become her happy place…
I had my first panic attack in 2010 when I was 30, as I was getting on a plane for our first family holiday abroad. I ended up being offloaded, along with the family, and taken to hospital. I thought at the time this was a one-off, having flown lots of times before, and didn’t think much else of it except for being disappointed that our holiday was cancelled. A few weeks later I had another panic attack at a concert. A few weeks after that, at a shopping centre… all getting closer and closer to home.
From then on I started to fear the panic and that’s when my problems really started; my world got so small that I struggled to leave the house. I would constantly be anxious about my anxiety and the ‘what ifs’ and so my Generalised Anxiety Disorder started; the fear of fear. It’s a vicious cycle.
For me, my anxiety manifests itself in heart palpitations (which can feel like you’re having a heart attack), hot sweats and a funny tummy, but also a feeling that I’m ‘going mad’ – although I don’t know what that is exactly. My mind whirs at a thousand miles an hour and my thoughts consume me. Will I be able to get to my daughters’ weddings? They’re nine and 11. What happens if…? Am I holding my family back? Are the kids missing out because we can’t go away anywhere?
As the months went on, it got worse and worse. While I was spending all this time at home, I’d browse Facebook and see these lovely crafty pages and think… I can make that. And so crafting began! I bought a Cricut Explore initially and now I also have the Cricut Maker, a Gemini and Big Shot all in constant use. I make cards, papercuts and scrapbook layouts, and have recently started using a MAMBI Happy Planner, which is just an excuse for adults to play with stickers. It’s awesome.
In the last 18 months I’ve become more aware of mindfulness. To use a sea analogy – crafting helps to keep the waves of anxiety moving rather than me getting stuck in the wave and tossed about. Recently I was suffering from a terrible panic attack, so I put a YouTube video on and learnt to crochet a mandala! Concentrating on how to do the stitches helped me stop focusing on the negative thoughts and feelings in my body. I’m now on my third mandala – each one represents me overcoming the panic and being a little bit more in control again.
I’d absolutely recommend anyone and everyone to take up a craft. A few weeks ago I was suffering and hadn’t created anything for a while so I put a post on my Instagram saying that my mental health wasn’t great. My crafting friends – none of whom I know in real life – were so incredibly supportive. On my own private feed of my ‘real life’ friends, not a single person acknowledged my struggle.
I have a long way to go until I’m back to the old me, and perhaps I never will be, but I hope that this won’t continue to control me forever. I can only be hopeful that this is just a blip – albeit a ten-year blip – and my life will return to normal.
Thank you for sharing your story, Beccy. If you need help or advice, visit nhs.uk
Pick up issue 82 of PaperCrafter to receive your FREE stamps!
Here at PaperCrafter HQ, our minds are already filled with bright and vibrant ideas that have summer written all over them. It’s the perfect time of year to try out new...
It’s finally the time you’ve all been waiting for… the new issue of PaperCrafter is out! Head to your local supermarket, newsagent or craft store and pick up a copy for a...