Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

Agony of losing mum to suicide four days after I’d won Junior All-ireland title

GAA star Brenda reveals how support has helped her cope with devastatio­n

- BY DARAGH SMALL newsni@mirror.co.uk

A TOP GAA player has told of the pain of losing her mum to suicide four days after winning an All-ireland title with her county.

Fermanagh’s Brenda Bannon said she still struggles with the anguish, but counsellin­g has helped her to control what she can.

She revealed: “We lost mam to suicide on December 10 last year.

“It was the hardest thing I have ever been through in my entire life. I know I will get through anything now, in football, in work, anything I come across, if I got through that.

“We won the All-ireland on December 6 and we lost mam on the 10th. She was very sick for a long time but you still never see it coming. It was elation to complete devastatio­n.

“Only for the football circles and things like that, I have got a lot of help through the Women’s Gaelic Players’ Associatio­n with counsellin­g, I just don’t think I would have got through it without that.”

Brenda has a tight family group as they prepare to sit around the dinner table for their first Christmas together in a long time. But it will be bitterswee­t without her mam Gaby.

For Brenda, her early years were turbulent. She was seven when her parents’ relationsh­ip broke down and 14 when she lost touch with her mother.

She left the family home and moved in with her late granny Maggie and dad Louie, before she lived with her eldest brother Declan.

There was toing and froing and even with all of the stress that accompanie­d the fractious nature of her teens, Brenda never sought any help.

She said: “When I moved out of home, I totally immersed myself in sport and school.

“I was just hellbent on proving a point. I didn’t want everything that had happened to slow me down or prevent me from being successful.

“I wanted to get to university, even though the odds were stacked against me.

“I literally just busied myself to the max. Dad was so good. He was running me everywhere.

“It could be athletics on a Monday night, it could be football and camogie on a Tuesday night, Wednesday night it could be netball. There was something every night.

“That was my way of not dealing with what was going on at the time. Looking back now, at 14 and after all that happened to me I moved out of home and I basically lost my mam then, I lost our relationsh­ip, I definitely should have got help.

“I remember my brother’s wife picked me up in a car one day. We were going into town shopping. She was like, you really need to deal with this. You should talk to someone outside of the family, someone neutral. She said if you don’t deal with this now, it will catch up with you.

“I can remember the conversati­on so vividly. If I had just listened to her then, things might have been different now. I might not have had to go the hard route around it.”

And Brenda succeeded in creating a future for herself.

She is a radiograph­er and just this week she switched from her role in Sligo University Hospital to splitting her time between Monaghan and Cavan hospitals. The 26-year-old Derrygonne­lly Harps forward completed a personal training and nutrition coaching course during the first lockdown and she will gradually begin her transition into that career now.

But none of that mattered when she was faced with her biggest adversity. Brenda had only rekindled the relationsh­ip with her mother in recent years but it was stronger than ever.

She recalled: “I can remember I could barely breathe talking to my counsellor about the morning we found mam.”

But she braved the early days and now she is 16 counsellin­g sessions into her new life.

It has been a breakthrou­gh and she urges others to seek help too.

She added: “It has been so beneficial to have someone neutral to speak to, just to even rationalis­e your thoughts.

“People think if you go to a counsellor it will wave a magic wand and you will be fine. Things don’t really get a whole pile easier, you just learn to deal with them.

“Even from a personal developmen­t standpoint, it has been brilliant. They will help you through things, whether it be a job interview or if you have had a grievance or argument with someone, nothing is too small for them to deal with.

“The coping mechanisms have been very good. Even just for your mindset, it really helps you to process your thought patterns.

“You learn so much about yourself through getting counsellin­g.

“My attachment styles in relationsh­ips, I have learned a lot about that. I would be quite an anxious attachment style.

“With my boyfriend, we are going out five years now but I have a fear of abandonmen­t from when I was a child. Things start to make sense from getting counsellin­g. Don’t get me wrong, it’s so hard, you have to go through the hard days.

“There will be tears, there will be points you will break and there will be points that you will laugh.

“But if you want to change and get out of a rut, you have to do it for

yourself.” It’s a fresh new perspectiv­e from someone who suffered such a tragic loss just 12 months ago.

However, through the help of the WGPA and her confidant, Margaret Mcgoldrick, Brenda is learning to process the untimely death of her mother and the tough teenage years that went before.

And with the help of family, friends and her club and county colleagues, Brenda has come through it looking to raise awareness about mental health. She hopes her story can help people in similar circumstan­ces.

She added: “The moral of the story is, as crazy as it seems, it’s OK to feel like that but if there is any doubt at all, or any thoughts about needing help, just go and do it. You definitely won’t regret it.”

If you want to change you have to do it for yourself BRENDA BANNON ON HER PERSONAL JOURNEY

 ?? ?? GIFTED PLAYER Brenda, left, in her county colours
TOGETHER Brenda with her late mum Gaby
GIFTED PLAYER Brenda, left, in her county colours TOGETHER Brenda with her late mum Gaby
 ?? ?? BRIGHT FUTURE Brenda working as a radiograph­er in Sligo
BRIGHT FUTURE Brenda working as a radiograph­er in Sligo

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