#1 My mind belongs to me again.
- Beth Husband
- Apr 13
- 5 min read
Updated: May 5
I was 16 when the world shut down, and strangely, something inside me switched on. While everything around me felt uncertain, I started building—partly to escape, partly because I didn’t know what else to do. What most people didn’t see was that, beneath the drive and ideas presented on social media, I was already fighting battles that weren’t visible.
My anxiety had started in secondary school - about 12-, but it was around 16 time that depression first took hold. I was put on medication for a separate health condition, and the side effects hit hard. Isolation from lockdown mixed with a chemical fog left me struggling to function. At 17, I went through an active suicidal period. It’s a blur now, but I remember constantly trying to convince myself that I wanted to live. Eventually, I changed medication and began to stabilise, but the healing was slow. Fragile. Unsteady.
Still, I moved forward. I didn’t take the traditional A-Level route. I chose a BTEC instead, not because it was easier, but because it felt more aligned with how I learn: by doing. I started building my first brand—Kurfews. A small clothing business that felt like a piece of myself. I learned to design, sell, market, and create something from the ground up. It wasn’t about the products. It was about creating something that was mine.
To help grow it, I applied to a local entrepreneurship incubator—six months of mentorship, support and a start-up grant—and to my surprise, I was accepted. The youngest one there.
At the same time, I was dreaming even bigger. I’d been obsessed with skydiving since I was 14. Not just the adrenaline of it, really—but the symbolism. The leap. The fear. I booked my first skydive for my 16th birthday, waited months through lockdowns, and finally jumped. The first jump shifted something in me. I started seeing myself as someone who moves. Someone who doesn’t wait around, but chases their goals.
But then came university.
At 18, I started uni and walked straight into a version of life I didn’t recognise. Nights out. Drinking. Trying to match the energy of a lifestyle that didn’t really fit me. I closed down my business - it was all too much. On the surface, I was social and adaptable. Underneath, I was spiraling. I started self-harming after nights out. I had another stretch of deep depression and being actively suicidal at 19, which led to urgent care visits and eventually moving home. I kept telling myself that once I fixed everything on the outside—my routine, my body, my work—I’d stop feeling this way. But nothing changed, because I was treating symptoms, not the wound.
On my 20th birthday, I hit another severe low. One of the worst depression hangovers I’ve ever had. A few months later, in October 2024, I experienced a severe mental health breakdown that would alter everything.
I had been working two bar jobs, juggling final year uni, chasing my skydiving licence, attending lectures —everything, all at once. I was sleeping maybe three hours a night. I thought I was managing, until I wasn’t.
I developed panic disorder, DRDP, and dementaphobia—the fear of going insane. I began experiencing something new during my panic attacks that I didn’t know how to name at the time: a constant, bone-deep sense of impending doom that took over my entire body for short periods of time ( the name of the symptom is "the feeling of impending doom" not just how it felt). It wasn’t just panic. It felt like death was coming, like my body was already reacting to something catastrophic. My vision slowed. I couldn’t process motion or sound normally. It was like my mind disconnected from the world.
One day at work, it hit me out of nowhere. I said I had a migraine and left early. I slept for days, but the symptoms didn’t go. I quit both my jobs and took time off uni. For a while, I just disappeared into myself.
I started seeing my friends and stuff again a bit more, felt like I was slowly starting to make progress, and I just kept telling myself "im being super overdramatic, why am I panicking over literally nothing, I need to get over myself."
Then Halloween came. I thought I could go out and feel normal. I wanted to believe I was okay. But I drank too much, had a severe episode, and ended up in hospital. My parents were called. I hit my head against the hospital bed rail repeatedly, had to be restrained—something that, I’ve since learned, is a common trauma response to acute mental distress. I remember flashes of it. Mostly, it’s a haze.
That night was a breaking point. I realised how sick I really was. That I couldn’t fix this alone. That I wasn’t just "sensitive" or "burnt out"—I was unwell, and I needed help.
In November, I started new medication for panic disorder and depression. It lifted the depression, but not the panic. Still, it gave me enough space to begin again.
It’s been almost eight months since. And I’m better than I’ve ever been.
In January my initial side affects of taking anti-depressants started to ease off, for the first time since I was a child I had been waking up early and not wanting to go back to bed, not wanting to choose sleep as my only daily activity, not having to convince myself that I actually wanted to have a life, and a soul and to walk on this planet. I actually felt it, I wasn't just telling myself it, I felt it.
My life started to change, and every month in 2025 so far has been so deeply and intensely filled with growth, self improvement and understanding that I wouldn't even recognise myself 6 months ago. I had lost my drive for purpose in life and can finally say i've not just gained it back, but i'm fully on a path towards the best version of myself that ever will exist and I can now help others to do the same.
That episode I experienced—however awful—gave me clarity. It pushed me into getting help. It forced me to stop performing recovery and start actually choosing it. Mental health issues run in my family. I used to see that as a curse. Now I see it as context.
I see people more deeply now. I want to understand lives that look nothing like mine. I want to give space to the unspoken.
That’s why I started The Freedom Edit - and that’s why I created the Freedom Stories Project. To capture the moments that change people. To document the battles no one sees. To remind anyone reading that if you’re stuck, breaking, or simply rebuilding—
you’re not alone.
Your story matters, even in the middle of it.
Freedom Story: #1
Age: 20
Nationality: British
Freedom quote: "My mind belongs to me again"
Soundtrack for this story: In My Head by Bedroom
Conducted in April 2025.
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