One in ten Brits have experienced anxiety or had a panic attack in the last week.
To combat the modern epidemic of invisible illness, many sufferers have spoken out about their experiences of depression and anxiety, offering advice to others.
One such woman from Bogotá, Colombia has shared her story with Humans Of New York photographer, Brandon Stanton.
The young woman told Brandon about her history of panic attacks, which started in high school, triggered by an illness and the pressures of formal education.
She said:
I was the best student in my high school. I put so much pressure on myself. I never failed a class. But I got sick during 10th grade and I started to fall behind.
That’s when the panic attacks began. One day the teacher handed me my grade report, and I couldn’t breathe.
“I was the best student in my high school. I put so much pressure on myself. I never failed a class. But I got sick…
Posted by Humans of New York on Wednesday, 5 April 2017
Recalling the trauma, she continued:
My heart was beating very fast. I felt disconnected. I saw people trying to talk to me but I couldn’t hear them.
Eventually I passed out and woke up in the infirmary. The attacks were almost daily after that.
She has come a long way since then and started college last year. However the pressures continued. She explained: “I can’t be the best student here no matter how hard I try. Everyone is so talented. My panic attacks got so bad that I had to cancel my first semester.”
She said she’s now working on acknowledging her anxiety, adding:
I used to try to hide it. I would log off social media. I wouldn’t answer calls. I thought that if nobody knew, it didn’t exist.
But the more I talk about my problem, the more I realize that other people experience similar things. So I’m trying to express it more.
A college tutor once told her, ‘Instead of letting anxiety keep you from doing your art, let it be the thing that motivates your art.’
If you’re suffering with anxiety – or know someone who needs help – you can anonymously get in touch with mental health charity, Mind.
A former emo kid who talks too much about 8Chan meme culture, the Kardashian Klan, and how her smartphone is probably killing her. Francesca is a Cardiff University Journalism Masters grad who has done words for BBC, ELLE, The Debrief, DAZED, an art magazine you’ve never heard of and a feminist zine which never went to print.