As We Near World Mental Health Day โ€“ Tips For Looking After Our Mental Health ๐Ÿ’†

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  • Santosha12
    Santosha12 Online Community Member Posts: 3,419 Championing

    Hi @ChristineC1, please excuse me interjecting on your thread. I've read your posts last week but not replied I'm sorry (recovering from Covid).

    I'm so sorry for what you've been going through but seen you've had some very kind and helpful comments.

    I just wanted to add have you heard of The Suzy Lamplugh Trust? They have a National Stalking Helpline. If you need it, their number is 0800 802 0300 it's open from 0930 to 2000hrs on Mon and Weds, and from 0930 to 1600hrs on Tues, Thurs and Fri. They're often very busy and ask if you can't get through to complete their online form and they will come back to you.

    It goes without saying that you should have the absolute right to peaceful and non-intrusive enjoyment of your home and garden, and not to feel menaced when you're out and about either. I think the police response was appalling (but I don't know their policy etc).

    Your posts today about your parents and Porscha were very moving. Being mostly housebound I'm trying to get to grips with improving my garden, being out in nature definitely helps.

    Take care of yourself and my very warmest wishes to you.

  • ChristineC1
    ChristineC1 Online Community Member Posts: 54 Contributor
    edited October 2025

    Hi Adrian,

    Thank you for your kindness and info about the stalking. So many of the established helplines are relationship based. I did have a stalking group who did the risk assessment and it was at the highest level, now reduced because of everything I done to create boundaries, and just don't leave the house now apart from therapy. I don't have anyone to call on locally apart from my therapist. My isolation creates a 24/7 access for him because he lives next door. It all came down to my word against his. He knows how to play the game of not getting caught. Even cleared away all the rubble after the drilling of the brickwork. But the guys who repaired the wall discovered he'd laid a piece of carpet over the bricks to make his access easier. I was infested with rats from his loft. He stole my identity too (passport, birth certif and NI card) but I only realised much later when I needed them for renewing my disabled badge. He is obsessed. When I was up a ladder doing the fencing his sensor light came on and I turned round to see him **** at his window, holding his bits. He has sat in his van waiting for me to arrive home with my sister when she was staying with me for my hospital appts. He was **** apart from a pair of shorts. He listens to my conversations and so I cannot have a private telephone conversation at home. I know this because he gossips about me. I find it odd that this is not a secretive behaviour. The other neighbours are just as vile but he has gone to great lengths to intimidate me. He left me a freaky sticker on my old fridge plug - STIRRER and burned my wall paper next to the boiler. If I had not been decorating I would have never discovered it. I still hear his door open when I turn off my tv to go to bed. He waits in the dark outside until I turn off my laptop. I then hear his door close. He cannot possibly see me with the double layer curtains and blinds I have at all the windows. I love in darkness because of him. It doesn't matter how many times I recall the details it just reinforces my situation.

    Hope you are on the mend with the dreaded covid and can get out into the garden. Even sitting watching Nature helps, though it is rather chilly and threatening rain out there. My cat, Sweetie, is nestled in a blanket waiting for me to serve her treats. We have been watching the birds feast on fat balls. Squirrels scamper and spiders survey their webs as leaves fall. I've been gathering another heap of fallen fig leaves. So satisfying banging the branches to get more to fall. Will get back out and potter, moving pots to sheltered spots and making plans for the Autumnal season ahead. Whatever you do, even sitting at a window looking out, being connected will fill you up. It does me.

    Getting back out there before my Sweetie comes looking for me.

    Lots of love xxx๐Ÿ˜

  • Mary_Scope
    Mary_Scope Posts: 3,972 Scope Online Community Children and Family Specialists

    So sorry to hear your situation @ChristineC1, it sounds very scary. You are very strong!!

    You can report the incidences to the police again if you feel able to or to your local authorities adult social care.

    You can also follow complaint procedures if you feel like you haven't been taken seriously. If you need any help with this please let us know.

    Please don't hesitate to call 999 if you feel like you're in immediate danger

  • Santosha12
    Santosha12 Online Community Member Posts: 3,419 Championing

    Hi @ChristineC1, thank you I'm not Covid positive now thankfully but slower than usual in getting my mojo back (well, what little there was to begin with ๐Ÿซ ๐Ÿ˜Š).

    I'm not Scope staff, just another forum user, unlike Adrian and Mary and others who are staff - I think if it's got _Scope next to their name, they're all Scope staff (so I'm not terribly knowledgeable but your situation sounds dreadful and I couldn't just 'walk past'). I'm glad you've had a risk assessment, I'd be keeping them updated on ongoing issues but that's just me and I don't know quite how they operate once you've got the boundaries in place). We're here for you; I don't think the staff are on here from 6pm to 10am each night.

    Stay safe; your cat sounds very, sweet, as her name implies ๐Ÿ˜. I'm in the garden a lot as I've got my dogs who are in and out all day. Sending hugs and wishing you a peaceful evening xx ๐Ÿซ‚

  • ChristineC1
    ChristineC1 Online Community Member Posts: 54 Contributor

    Hi Santosha,

    I appreciate your friendship and kindness. Really helps connecting with people. I know I can't change my situation but having the cameras and high fencing seems to be doing the trick. I shout 'RECORD!' when I hear him and he seems to skulk away. I can never really settle or be off guard but it's better now than it's ever been. He used to watch me through the bushes and laugh with the neighbour on the other side to him (a middle aged woman who should know better but joined him in his antics) when I had a panic attack and have to go in the house. He even had a mirror on the shed wall so he could keep tabs on me. He took it down when the fence went up.

    It's good having Sweetie as she alerts me to him when he's lurking behind the fence. She's quite fierce with the birds. A real hunter. But adores her mammy! And treats. Gives me the kissing eyes and 'makes cakes' when she's happy (kneading the blanket).

    Just waiting for 'The Hack' at 9pm. My tv has lost it's brightness so very annoying. Can vaguely make out what's happening but a bit of a guessing game. Will be in bed soon with my laptop and 'Colin From Accounts'. Love it.

    Stay warm babe. Quite chilly today. First day I've had to pop a jumper on.

    ๐Ÿ˜ฑ xxx

  • ChristineC1
    ChristineC1 Online Community Member Posts: 54 Contributor

    Hi Mary_Scope,

    I hadn't thought about Adult Social Care so will look into that. Thank you. I won't bother contacting the police again unless he actually threatens or attacks me, which I doubt he will. I still find living like this intolerable but have no choice. It's a warped reality to the ordinary life I lived before. I've just heard his door and assume that he is now watching me from the dark because I have the lights on in my garden with the curtains open. I honestly don't know what he gets out of doing this. All I'm doing is watching tv. All the neighbours know how obsessed he is. He has no shame.

    ๐Ÿ˜” xxx

  • ChristineC1
    ChristineC1 Online Community Member Posts: 54 Contributor

    Hi Santosha,

    I love the image that 'sitting with sadness' conjures up. To give it definition helps next time I am engulfed by grief. I just can't seem to 'move on', no matter how busy and motivated I keep myself. I can burst into tears for no reason. So to personalise it, give it human dimensions, should ease the wave when it descends. I'm imaging my Grandma now, sitting with me until the sorrow passes. It is debilitating. All I want to do is be with them. Nobody can describe the feeling of being utterly heartbroken. The chinks of joy throughout the day keeps me going. And friendships online are precious. To share is to lighten the load a little.

    My Dad loved those flowers, along with his precious dahlia's. I always helped stake them because they were huge, the size of dinner plates. The old garden was full of jewels and I'd return home with bundles of flowers to adorn my own garden table because my house is so dark. That's why I garden. To feel close to them. I feel disconnected when I'm not out there. I have piles of leaves to bag up when the rain stops. My Sweetie is looking for mischief in the house because of the rain, even though she has the sofa with the taupe, creating a cave. We often sit together and enjoy the rain. Reminds me of camping as a kid. It always rained no matter where we were. Nestled under blankets with a hot drink and puzzle book. That's how I start my day, overlooking the garden, with Sweetie popping in and out through the window. She likes to keep an eye on me at all times.

    My mam loved the Bee Gees and I do love that song. The memory tags are a collection of things that make mam special. Dad said he didn't want to be in the shrine and so I haven't added him in. But I will add little sails because he loved his boating. I was forever maintaining it, down in the engine room and scraping off barnacles when it was out of the water for repainting. It's only since losing my parents that I can see how lovely my life was with them. I had no objective point of view because it was my life and I was living in the moment. Everything becomes so precious afterwards. There's a line drawn creating a 'before' and 'after'. I'd give everything to be back in my old life. OMG I'm so upset again.

    Good news. I have a new date for surgery in less than 2 weeks. I can only assume they will make it happen this time after all the delays. But I did go into meltdown yesterday after a phone call with a researcher into how people manage to eat again after reconstructive surgery. Mine is simple. They cut out the area and away I go. The only reconstruction will be to patch the area inside my lip where the cancer will be cut away. Spoke to my cancer nurse and he explained it. I'm so fragile at the mo and just go into a panic. Will be glad when it's all over and I can just live life again, even if it is very limited.

    Must make a start on the day. I have no motivation at the mo. Sweetie is busy mooching about under the bed after I took the drawer out for clean bedding. Will have to coax her out with some Catnip Dreamies. At least she's not chasing bluetits.

    Here's some Autumnal pics from before the rain started lashing down. I have just one climbing rose scrambling through the canopy.

    DSCN8617.JPG

    Rosehips for the birds

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    and a blackberry or two.

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    Habitat corner is well stocked for hibernating creatures.

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    Assorted plants are ready to be dug in around the small pond (ferns and palms).

    DSCN8614.JPG

    Needs some TLC. Lots of hibernating caves for the frogs and toads. The foxes are probs responsible for the waterfall tray sliding into the pond.

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    I've been feeding a mother and her newborn for years now. Dog food, sardines, berry fat balls and eggs. Every night around 7. And Sweetie watches for them, keeping guard over the garden. They wait now until she comes in because she's so fierce.

    DSCN8655.JPG

    I have lots of leaves waiting for me. You can just make out Sweeties boxes in the background, covered in tarp. Loves a cardboard box and comes running when she hears I have a new one! Soz about the bad pic. Batteries were running flat. That's my excuse!

    DSCN8657.JPG

    Still raining. I hope the big pond is filling up again as it's run dry with the ongoing leak. Just a muddy puddle now. Replacing the liner is not a job I'm looking forward to next year. I could just create a rose garden in it but I'd miss the waterfall I'd created. Drowns out the noise of the neighbours and the cars.

    DSCN8620.JPG

    Hope your list is coming together. My day will be filled with household chores and cleaning the fish tank. My Elsie is a massive goldfish. Ancient and full of lumps and bumps now. Still precious. She sits with me watching tv. And Sweetie sits waiting for her fish flakes.

    Take care babe. Lots of love xxx๐Ÿ˜€

  • StarryEyed
    StarryEyed Online Community Member Posts: 874 Pioneering

    Here is the thread about making emergency plans:

    @MadMilan2019 I agree with your assessment of this poet!