Marriage break-up
Dawn’s husband moved away and took Peter’s two sisters with him,
leaving Dawn alone to cope with an increasingly stressful home
life.
However, things started to look a bit brighter after her divorce
when she began a relationship with Gerry. She met him through an
internet chat room and, at 29, he is 16 years her junior.
All went well at first. But then Dawn began to realise that
Gerry had problems too.
“I must say,” said Dawn, “he wasn’t completely honest about his
mental state when we chatted online. He’d said that he’d had some
depression and because I had too, we could relate to one
another.”
It turned out, though, that Gerry’s problems were a little more
serious. In fact, due to the trauma he’d experienced through his
childhood illnesses, Gerry had had mental problems for many years
and had been diagnosed as having schizoid-affective disorder.
“But in many ways, our relationship has been beneficial for
Peter,” said Dawn. “He is now 21, so he and Gerry are quite close
in age, and they have interests in common, like watching football
on television. Gerry is almost in the role of older brother and
because of his own mental problems, he’s doesn’t judge Peter.”
“Most of the time Gerry’s OK,” Dawn added. “But then he has
episodes where he gets very paranoid and he can become suicidal
quite quickly.
“On top of that. Peter won’t go out. He stays in the home,
because he finds any kind of interaction with others difficult. But
it’s as if one person dominates the whole house, and everything has
to be worked around them.”
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