
Author interview: Psychiatric care left wanting — ‘I lost so much' as a psychosis patient
When Mary Ann Kenny's husband John collapsed and died while out running near their home in Co Dublin, she was blindsided by the sudden and devastating loss. But for Mary Ann, the nightmare was only beginning.
The circumstances of John's death and having to tell her two young sons had a profound impact on her and she struggled to cope in the aftermath.
She was prescribed sleeping pills, sedatives, and finally anti-depressants, to which she had a severe physical reaction.
Soon after, she experienced psychosis, believing her children had somehow been poisoned by her medication, and ended up in psychiatric care on two occasions.
In her compelling and affecting memoir, The Episode, she describes how the whole experience, including being denied access to her children for a period, left her feeling dehumanised and even more traumatised.
'I felt cast out by society. I had no rights, I had no voice. And that is the greatest kind of trauma. On an evolutionary basis, we need to be part of a society,' she says.
We need connection with other people. We need care when we're sick and that had been withdrawn from me.
It is 10 years since John's death and Mary Ann's admission to a psychiatric hospital; her career as an academic is thriving and she and her sons, now teenagers, are in a good place.
However, the anger she feels about her treatment stayed with her, which eventually led to her writing the book.
She says: 'I couldn't put it behind me. It was consuming me and my every thought. I have a very strong sense of injustice, and so did John.
'When my involvement with psychiatric services came to an end, I felt liberated, but I was also full of questions about what had happened to me.
'I requested my files and I was enraged by what I read, about the way I had been treated as a person who had suffered a very sudden and tragic loss and was at the lowest point of my life.
'I felt I hadn't been treated with the compassion and care that I deserved. Yes, I lost John but I lost so much as a patient.'
That astonishing lack of care and compassion towards a grieving wife and mother is evident throughout Mary Ann's treatment as recounted in the book.
Kindness needed more than psychiatric treatment
She acknowledges that while she did require psychiatric treatment, what she needed even more was kindness and most of all an opportunity to process the overwhelming accumulation of grief, uncertainty, and anxiety.
She also felt tremendous guilt for relying on her friends and her own elderly mother who herself needed care.
As she writes: 'What I needed most was to rest my tortured brain and my exhausted body.'
Instead, the death of her husband was barely mentioned and she was subjected to endless questions and team meetings where some staff didn't even introduce themselves or acknowledge her presence.
'It was absolutely torturous and excruciating to me to be asked perpetually about my thoughts at a time when I was heavily medicated, seriously ill, and exhausted and unable to verbalise my thoughts anyway, and certainly not in front of a group of professionals, half of whom I might never have met before,' she says.
Mary Ann received no talk therapy during her admissions and it was only when she left hospital and attended a cognitive behavioural therapy group that psychotic depression was explained to her.
'It is beyond belief,' she says. 'When I would say to people that I didn't get any therapy when I was in hospital, they would be like: 'What? You must have'.'
It's shocking, and it's seems to be much more a feature of psychiatric treatment.
She compares her experience to one she had when she was admitted to hospital for a serious injury two years ago.
'One of the big differences was that I was kept informed the whole time,' she says.
'I was never sent copies of any letters that went from my psychiatric consultant to my GP, whereas, when I had my physical injury, every single communication between my surgeon and my GP was copied to me so I was kept up to date the whole time.
'The first time I saw the equivalent letters for my psychiatric treatment, and I'm talking about my outpatient care as well over the following years, was when I requested my files.
'I was kept completely in the dark. It is all part of that dehumanisation and disempowerment.'
According to Mary Ann, the psychiatric system views mental illness as a chronic condition, which is counter-productive to recovery:
'There was no sense from them that this was ever going to end — they did not hold out any hope that this would resolve itself.'
They view the person who's mentally ill as a collection of symptoms — weight loss, insomnia, delusional thinking, in my case — and they treat those symptoms in a vacuum.
When her brother visited her, he told her what she describes as the single most helpful thing that anyone said to her during her period in hospital.
She writes: 'It's an episode… and an episode has a beginning, a middle and an end… you're now in the middle — and the middle is horrendous — but episodes always end, and this will end.
'No mental health professional ever said anything remotely similar in all the months I spent being treated by them. It would have helped if they had.
'As it was, my brother's mantra gave me hope. And it turned out to be true.'
Mary Ann refers to being caught up in a mental health system that is itself sick.
She says she would be 'delighted' if mental health practitioners and social workers read the book and learned something from it.
'I have been as fair as I possibly can to them,' she says. 'It is a hard position that they're in, but it is not black and white.
'I hope that they see that there is a human being at the heart of this particular mental health emergency and every mental health emergency — a human being who is suffering.
'We all need to have a bit more compassion — professionals and society.'
She found the process of getting her experience onto the page cathartic to an extent but it was also a journey of discovery as she pieced together what had happened to her.
'I wanted to put my story on the record,' she says. 'There were other records — this is my record. But I had to unravel it.
'It was very therapeutic, it hugely aided my understanding of what had happened to me.'
While she has achieved clarity, she says her experience in psychiatric care is never far from her thoughts:
'I still think about so many aspects of this story all the time. I think about John all the time and his death, it was his anniversary recently.
'It's spring again, the sun is shining, the clematis is flowering … and then the next few months come and it's July and I'm thinking, this is when … so it's never too far from my thoughts, any of it.'
The Episode not only serves as a reminder that there is always hope but also as a way to remember her husband John and celebrate all that he brought to his family's lives.
'We are a very close unit and we have our sad moments, but we keep John alive and we talk about him a lot,' Mary Ann says.
'I wove whatever I could about him into this story. He would have been incensed about what happened to me but overjoyed by this book.
'His spirit lives on in it, it really does.'
Read More
Book Review: Danny Morrison looks at a history of psychiatry
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Irish Independent
a day ago
- Irish Independent
Cork man says he is being blocked from leaving Philippines to access vital cancer treatment at home
73-year-old John O'Neill, originally from Gerald Griffin Street in Blackpool, says that he was denied leave from the Philippines earlier this year, having been told to return home for treatment of prostate cancer, which the Cork native says is killing him. Mr O'Neill says he was told by authorities at the airport that he owed 'immigration fees', which he disputes, and is now in limbo as the case gets resolved while he is dying from cancer. 'I came here to the Philippines in 2013 to open my charity 'Rice for Life', to feed women and children in awful poverty,' John explains, who lives in Dumaguete, on the southern tip of Negros Island with his wife Frizell and son Clovesky. However, John said the work he was doing wasn't appreciated by everyone, and that he had received death threats on multiple occasions by radical groups, in an area in which he says is dangerous to be a foreigner. 'Two weeks before COVID, I had decided to go back home to live the rest of my life out there, but when that kicked off, I was stuck in the Philippines for five years,' John said, adding that for weeks he was forced to stay at home, while his Filipino partner was allowed out to do the family's weekly shop. After restrictions were lifted, John went back to his charity work until a crushing diagnosis of Prostate Cancer in March of last year turned his life on its head. 'I was in the hospital here for 12 days, but they told me they couldn't do any more for me,' John explains from his bed, as the country enters its rainy season. 'I tried two hospitals in Cebu, and was told by one Chinese surgeon they did not have the technology to treat me here like they could in my own country. 'He said, 'I think Cork can guarantee you 15 years of life, would you be happy about that?'. 'I saved a few bob to fly back to Cork, and I had organised for my records to be sent over and to get treatment in a Cork hospital. I booked the flight with my 9-year-old son, from Cebu to the capital Manila, then onwards to Cork via China and London. 'We had no problem on the first flight, but when we got to the queue to give our passports and flight ticket, we were refused permission to fly. 'They said I may owe them immigration fees, which I totally disagreed with, and they told me that it would take 6 months to sort out. 'I won't live that long without treatment, and I told the supervisor that they were abusing my human rights, however, he just said, 'Sorry Sir, these are the laws of our country.'' John says that in the time since, he cannot get a clear answer from the government on how much exactly he owes the Filipino government, who say the fees relate to COVID-related costs. John claims that he has paid the requisite fees, but claims the goalposts have been changed by the government. In limbo, Mr O'Neill says he can't get an answer to exactly what he owes until the six-month review of his case is concluded, which the Cork native says was confirmed by two separate lawyers. In the nine weeks since, John said he has contacted local TDs and the Irish embassy in a bid to get some help in trying to waive the substantial fees and finally board a flight that may save his life. However, the Cork native is still in limbo, and says he is getting weaker every day that passes without treatment. An old Irish friend, Waterford-based writer and musician Billy Costine, has started a GoFundMe for the 73-year-old, which he's hoping will cover the cost of whatever amount the 'immigration fee' bill that will arrive at the Cork native's door. Billy said he's left 'angry' by what he's called a 'corrupt' government decision, and that if something isn't done shortly, his friend John will be 'coming home in a box'. 'I'm not a great believer in religion, but I would be totally lifted if I could come home,' an emotional John says. 'Even though I am not frightened of death, because every single one of us has to die – from mouse to man – you start counting on our figures and thinking about what it means. 'Going down to Crosshaven, heading out fishing, it makes you think totally differently. 'If I die, I want it to be under an Irish blue sky,'


Irish Examiner
23-05-2025
- Irish Examiner
Author interview: Psychiatric care left wanting — ‘I lost so much' as a psychosis patient
When Mary Ann Kenny's husband John collapsed and died while out running near their home in Co Dublin, she was blindsided by the sudden and devastating loss. But for Mary Ann, the nightmare was only beginning. The circumstances of John's death and having to tell her two young sons had a profound impact on her and she struggled to cope in the aftermath. She was prescribed sleeping pills, sedatives, and finally anti-depressants, to which she had a severe physical reaction. Soon after, she experienced psychosis, believing her children had somehow been poisoned by her medication, and ended up in psychiatric care on two occasions. In her compelling and affecting memoir, The Episode, she describes how the whole experience, including being denied access to her children for a period, left her feeling dehumanised and even more traumatised. 'I felt cast out by society. I had no rights, I had no voice. And that is the greatest kind of trauma. On an evolutionary basis, we need to be part of a society,' she says. We need connection with other people. We need care when we're sick and that had been withdrawn from me. It is 10 years since John's death and Mary Ann's admission to a psychiatric hospital; her career as an academic is thriving and she and her sons, now teenagers, are in a good place. However, the anger she feels about her treatment stayed with her, which eventually led to her writing the book. She says: 'I couldn't put it behind me. It was consuming me and my every thought. I have a very strong sense of injustice, and so did John. 'When my involvement with psychiatric services came to an end, I felt liberated, but I was also full of questions about what had happened to me. 'I requested my files and I was enraged by what I read, about the way I had been treated as a person who had suffered a very sudden and tragic loss and was at the lowest point of my life. 'I felt I hadn't been treated with the compassion and care that I deserved. Yes, I lost John but I lost so much as a patient.' That astonishing lack of care and compassion towards a grieving wife and mother is evident throughout Mary Ann's treatment as recounted in the book. Kindness needed more than psychiatric treatment She acknowledges that while she did require psychiatric treatment, what she needed even more was kindness and most of all an opportunity to process the overwhelming accumulation of grief, uncertainty, and anxiety. She also felt tremendous guilt for relying on her friends and her own elderly mother who herself needed care. As she writes: 'What I needed most was to rest my tortured brain and my exhausted body.' Instead, the death of her husband was barely mentioned and she was subjected to endless questions and team meetings where some staff didn't even introduce themselves or acknowledge her presence. 'It was absolutely torturous and excruciating to me to be asked perpetually about my thoughts at a time when I was heavily medicated, seriously ill, and exhausted and unable to verbalise my thoughts anyway, and certainly not in front of a group of professionals, half of whom I might never have met before,' she says. Mary Ann received no talk therapy during her admissions and it was only when she left hospital and attended a cognitive behavioural therapy group that psychotic depression was explained to her. 'It is beyond belief,' she says. 'When I would say to people that I didn't get any therapy when I was in hospital, they would be like: 'What? You must have'.' It's shocking, and it's seems to be much more a feature of psychiatric treatment. She compares her experience to one she had when she was admitted to hospital for a serious injury two years ago. 'One of the big differences was that I was kept informed the whole time,' she says. 'I was never sent copies of any letters that went from my psychiatric consultant to my GP, whereas, when I had my physical injury, every single communication between my surgeon and my GP was copied to me so I was kept up to date the whole time. 'The first time I saw the equivalent letters for my psychiatric treatment, and I'm talking about my outpatient care as well over the following years, was when I requested my files. 'I was kept completely in the dark. It is all part of that dehumanisation and disempowerment.' According to Mary Ann, the psychiatric system views mental illness as a chronic condition, which is counter-productive to recovery: 'There was no sense from them that this was ever going to end — they did not hold out any hope that this would resolve itself.' They view the person who's mentally ill as a collection of symptoms — weight loss, insomnia, delusional thinking, in my case — and they treat those symptoms in a vacuum. When her brother visited her, he told her what she describes as the single most helpful thing that anyone said to her during her period in hospital. She writes: 'It's an episode… and an episode has a beginning, a middle and an end… you're now in the middle — and the middle is horrendous — but episodes always end, and this will end. 'No mental health professional ever said anything remotely similar in all the months I spent being treated by them. It would have helped if they had. 'As it was, my brother's mantra gave me hope. And it turned out to be true.' Mary Ann refers to being caught up in a mental health system that is itself sick. She says she would be 'delighted' if mental health practitioners and social workers read the book and learned something from it. 'I have been as fair as I possibly can to them,' she says. 'It is a hard position that they're in, but it is not black and white. 'I hope that they see that there is a human being at the heart of this particular mental health emergency and every mental health emergency — a human being who is suffering. 'We all need to have a bit more compassion — professionals and society.' She found the process of getting her experience onto the page cathartic to an extent but it was also a journey of discovery as she pieced together what had happened to her. 'I wanted to put my story on the record,' she says. 'There were other records — this is my record. But I had to unravel it. 'It was very therapeutic, it hugely aided my understanding of what had happened to me.' While she has achieved clarity, she says her experience in psychiatric care is never far from her thoughts: 'I still think about so many aspects of this story all the time. I think about John all the time and his death, it was his anniversary recently. 'It's spring again, the sun is shining, the clematis is flowering … and then the next few months come and it's July and I'm thinking, this is when … so it's never too far from my thoughts, any of it.' The Episode not only serves as a reminder that there is always hope but also as a way to remember her husband John and celebrate all that he brought to his family's lives. 'We are a very close unit and we have our sad moments, but we keep John alive and we talk about him a lot,' Mary Ann says. 'I wove whatever I could about him into this story. He would have been incensed about what happened to me but overjoyed by this book. 'His spirit lives on in it, it really does.' Read More Book Review: Danny Morrison looks at a history of psychiatry


Irish Times
11-05-2025
- Irish Times
‘Losing my husband, losing my mind': Author says she is living proof people can recover from severe mental illness
We meet in Fitzpatrick Castle Hotel in Killiney , south Co Dublin . It's near home for Mary Ann Kenny, and also near where her husband John collapsed one fine April day in 2015 while jogging, and died. His death left Kenny, a lecturer in German, and their two primary-school-aged boys stunned, grieving, their lives suddenly torn apart. Over the following months as they groped through life, Kenny's grief became intense, with depression and several physical and psychological symptoms, including delusions that her boys had taken her medication and been harmed. She lost touch with reality and developed psychosis, spending 10 weeks in a psychiatric hospital. It was a dark time. Ten years later, life is healthy and happy and she has written The Episode, a memoir about her personal experience of severe mental illness. It's remarkably detailed, drawing on her own memories and observations, and multiple medical and social-work files. There's a dizzying array of professionals, medications, treatments. Professionals and friends are anonymised, as is a day-care centre and psychiatric hospital. She steers an arresting course between an academic's rigorous research and pacy, insightful readability. Today there's no hint of what she's been through. 'I've been very good for a long time.' She's calm, analytical, articulate. READ MORE Many people go through grief, but hers was extreme, 'particularly cruel, I suppose'. Because it was sudden. Because she had two small children ('it's impossible to overstate the burden of that'). Because of her 'aloneness': John was an only child, her siblings lived abroad; she had very good friends but her main support came from her 90-year-old mother Bernie ('she's the hero'). Grief triggered a series of events, leading to psychosis. She talks about complex traumas: 'I lost control of everything ... I was obsessed with this belief that I had damaged my children, ruined my children's lives. It was one of the most traumatic things you could imagine. That there's no hope for them.' And then, 'what happened to me in hospital', where, she says, 'my identity was just torn to shreds'. Writing The Episode has helped her tease out the interplay of her feelings of guilt. The feeling that she hadn't protected the boys enough from life's cruelties somehow became an obsessional belief that she had damaged them, and led to psychosis. Over a few months everything spiralled and she went from attending a day centre to being admitted twice to a psychiatric hospital. She vividly portrays what it's like on the other side of constant questions, over and over, from multiple healthcare professionals. She'd like professionals 'to see what it feels like at the receiving end', she says. Mary Ann Kenny: 'I felt annihilated by my treatment, annihilated as a person.' Photograph: Dara Mac Dónaill After intense assessments, she went on to tell professionals in October 2015 that she wanted to harm her own children, and herself. It's shocking to read. She writes: 'Why did I do it? Why did I say such appalling things – none of which was true and none of which I believed, even at the time, and all of which were guaranteed to make my situation so much worse? Because I thought I was living in a parallel realm and believed that what I was saying didn't matter in the real world inhabited by everyone else? 'Because I was close to collapse, having barely eaten during the preceding weeks, because of the effects of the antipsychotic medication on my prefrontal cortex, the part of the brain responsible for executive functions? 'Because it seemed to me that the professionals with their faces of mistrust and frustration believed that I was guilty of something , and I myself thought I was guilty too? Because I had been asked the same questions over and over for two months and I couldn't fight them off any more? Because I wanted to be agreeable and to give the medical staff what they seemed to be looking for?' But having said what she said, 'my fate was sealed', she observes now. There has to be a better way of treating somebody in such distress. I felt annihilated by my treatment, annihilated as a person — Mary Ann Kenny The reader feels the frustration of the constant interrogation, but feels pity for the professionals too. Kenny knows this. She says 'the worst of the lies, the self-incriminating details, I blurted out in the first 10 days. Then I stopped. I started to come to my senses. It's incredible how quickly I actually regained my sanity after that, started to realise the delusional belief was wrong.' [ How I coped when grief became my new reality Opens in new window ] She realised, too, 'the seriousness of what I'd said'. Kenny acknowledges what the professionals must have feared, when she said she planned to harm her children and herself. 'I never did have those plans and intentions ... There's nothing more tragic than those cases, of a parent doing something to their children because they are mentally ill, maybe in ways not dissimilar to me." However, she says: 'I felt annihilated by my treatment, annihilated as a person, as a human being, as a mother, as a daughter, as a friend. I felt literally torn apart.' Psychotherapy later, privately, helped her process the trauma of 'losing my husband, losing my mind … Mostly I needed therapy to help me come to terms with my hospital experience'. Mary Ann Kenny exposed her inner turmoil and psychiatric illness, for reasons that were 'bigger than any need for privacy'. Photograph: iStock She observes, from reading about psychiatry as well her own experience of it, 'they treat symptoms. But they don't ask about the cause.' Our psychiatric system, she says, is 'all about risk assessment and risk prevention, for the severely mentally ill anyway, rather than care or therapeutic intervention for patients' sake.' [ Huge variations between hospitals in treatment of mental health emergencies Opens in new window ] She felt disempowered, she says. 'I thought I was going to die in there. I thought my children were going to be taken away from me. There has to be a better way. This was a person in distress, suffering, who led a completely normal life up to the day her husband died. Something has happened to her, and we have to help her.' She felt 'cast out. I felt a complete social failure. That is incredibly traumatic.' It was eight months out of her life. She sometimes thinks of it as 'having to break down in order to get the help I needed'. But it was an episode. It ended. 'And it never came back.' Ten years later, she's still working. Her sons are in secondary school. 'They're absolutely wonderful. We're a very, very happy, close unit, the three of us.' The weird thing is, after the episode ... I have never looked back. I've never had a day's depression since — Mary Ann Kenny 'Maybe the drugs worked. Who am I to say they didn't work?' Key was her delusions waning. 'I stopped believing I had harmed my children.' In her experience: 'Antipsychotics, they dull your cognitive activity, as well as your emotional feelings.' With a self-destructive, delusional belief, 'maybe that's exactly what you need. If you become like a zombie, which I did, maybe that's, in the first instance, beneficial.' Or 'perhaps it was the passage of time', and removal from daily life. [ Adam Loughnane asked for help at a Galway hospital. Three hours later he was dead Opens in new window ] 'All I know is, I was no longer obsessing about this one thing,' and instead started to worry about 'real-world worries. Maybe I just had no space left to worry about the imaginary thing ... And then I was better. It's extraordinary. How could you get so ill and then you get better?' Her experience puts in context how anyone can be vulnerable. Bad things happen; perhaps any person's life and mind could fall apart. But also, that people can recover from severe mental illness. 'I'm the living proof.' 'The weird thing is, after the episode ... I have never looked back. I've never had a day's depression since. I have never been crippled by grief again. There's a poignant, melancholic sadness about John ... I experienced an extreme collapse of my entire life. So when I got my life back, I was overcome with joy.' Ultimately, 'the whole experience made me stronger'. The first draft of what was to become her book took three years, writing for herself, to make sense of it all. She felt she'd gained insights into the psychology of her breakdown worth sharing. 'I think other people can learn from it. I didn't set out to bash the professionals, and I don't think I did.' [ Mental health in Ireland: 'Should we not be helping people before they get down to the breakdown stage?' Opens in new window ] She has exposed her inner turmoil and psychiatric illness, for reasons that were 'bigger than any need for privacy'. Reading her own records, she felt 'that's not my story. My personal truth about what happened to me is different from those files. And I want to put my story on the record.' The Episode, A True Story of Loss, Madness and Healing, by Mary Ann Kenny is published by Sandycove, an imprint of Penguin Random House