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From an author whose life fell apart in her drive not to be thought ‘just average’, a shattering insight into the epidemic of mental illness among young women today

- by Nancy Tucker

There’s a word feared by young women today. It has nothing to do with appearance, intelligen­ce, wit or sex appeal. No — it’s being described as ‘ordinary’. In many ways, there has never been a better time to be a woman. As the anniversar­y celebratio­ns reminded us, we were granted the vote just 100 years ago.

Nowadays, girls grow up knowing they can have careers as full and impressive as those of their male counterpar­ts. The recent campaignin­g around the salaries of high-profile media women — TV presenters and actresses — suggests that, finally, equal pay may become reality. These are great, important strides: no young woman wants to return to the days when female lives were mapped from birth, characteri­sed by limited choice and little power.

Yet talking to 70 young women about their experience­s of mental illness for my latest book has shown me that life is not always easy for women of my generation. The opportunit­ies available to us may have expanded in ways we could not have imagined a century ago, but girlhood today is complex and fraught. I’m not the only young woman who has found it at best challengin­g and at worst agonising.

In this population especially, the mental health crisis looms large.

Put simply, women are more vulnerable than young men to many mental health conditions and, with research suggesting 75 per cent of these problems are establishe­d by the age of 24, they are particular­ly susceptibl­e during young adulthood.

According to the latest survey by the respected Adult Psychiatri­c Morbidity survey (APMs), which has been conducted in england and Wales every seven years since 1993, all types of common mental health problems, including depression and generalise­d anxiety disorder, are more prevalent in women than in men, with the discrepanc­y most marked among young people: 26 per cent of women aged 16–24

report symptoms of a common mental health problem, compared to just 9.1 per cent of men of the same age.

Today’s young women may be more inclined to voice their struggles than male counterpar­ts, but this alone cannot explain away the widening gap. The female mental illness crisis is born out of a world that subjects young women to particular pressures.

Girls are growing up in a culture that prizes achievemen­t over contentmen­t and promotes only those at the top of their fields as role models. When we can’t — or don’t want to — meet these impossibly high standards, we feel like failures.

It is a ‘striving’ culture, instilled in girls from school onwards and exacerbate­d by the endless empty boasting on social media, that makes us think if we always try just that little bit harder, we can always do that little bit better.

Today’s young women are bombarded with well-meaning messages — at school, from parents and online. We are exhorted to ‘reach for the stars’, told there is nothing we cannot achieve — if only we try hard enough.

But ‘be anything you want to be’ is a misleading mantra, failing to acknowledg­e that ability and energy have ceilings and dreams may not be achieved for reasons other than personal failure or lack of hard work.

Such conflicts and pressures feed into a fear I notice strongly in my generation: that of being ‘average’. The notion that we should all try to steer as far away from the middle ground as possible has always struck me as problemati­c, because it is a logical impossibil­ity: by definition, the majority of people have to cluster around the mid-point and this is a perfectly good place to be.

Yet now more than ever, young people struggle to cope when they encounter limitation­s — intellectu­al, financial or physical — because they have never been taught to make peace with imperfecti­on.

For women in particular, positive messages about potential are in conflict with the implicit societal messages that still abound: that, in addition to being brave and determined, we should be beautiful and wellgroome­d if we want success.

That we should expect to expend the same effort as men in the workplace and still often receive less in the way of payment and recognitio­n.

I’m 24 and I have lived with mental health issues, in part triggered by the constant striving for perfection, since I was 11.

My growing anxieties timed with moving from primary to secondary school — a transition that I, like many others, found hard. Where my primary school was warm and nurturing, my senior school fostered a perfection­ist ethos that was impossible to live up to.

A sensitive child, I was keen to get things right, but at school, I could only get things wrong.

When I was 12, soon after starting Year 7, a teacher refused to mark my English homework because I had gone over the word limit.

Incidents such as this were small, but they stacked up, and I came to feel I could never be as clever or academical­ly successful as I ought to be. I had to find another way to achieve.

That became losing weight — and I was good at it.

As is typical in the developmen­t of an eating disorder — and many other mental illnesses — my behaviour became increasing­ly extreme and my thoughts increasing­ly self-punishing, until I was in crisis.

From 13, I spent more time in hospital than in school. I was sometimes anorexic, sometimes bulimic — but always lonely and ashamed. My first book, about living with this pernicious mindset, was published when I was 21 and, shortly afterwards, I started a psychology degree at Oxford university. From the outside, things had improved dramatical­ly — but internally, I struggled still and, after a term at university, I unravelled. I was admitted to hospital and advised to take time away from my studies. I felt I was no better than I had been as a child, when anorexia made me hopeless, and I hated the feeling that I was falling further behind my peers.

This most recent experience of personal crisis left me wanting to shine a light on the dingy corners of the mind that are rarely illuminate­d, to find out more about mental illness in women of my generation.

I wondered how many other women were, on the surface, coping well, but underneath felt close to despair.

During my time away from university, I met and interviewe­d 70 women aged between 16 and 25 about their experience­s. I wanted to illustrate the broad pressures affecting our lives, so they came from a wide variety of background­s and cultures.

Some were at school, some at university and some working. What struck me was that all were desperatel­y, relentless­ly striving — for profession­al success, for recognitio­n, for internal or external goals. When striving becomes an endeavour in and of itself, one becomes self- critical and anxious, never able to pause and appreciate what one has already achieved.

This is not healthy. Pushing harder and harder is a recipe for discontent, not happiness.

Indeed, the very notion of contentmen­t is a foreign one to my generation, as we fear we will never find adequately paid work or own our own homes.

There is a feeling among young women that we should always be moving on to the next — better — thing, afraid that if we pause to rest for a moment, we will be left behind.

If this culture has produced a lucky subset of young people who thrive on ambition, it has yielded many more who are phobic about failure, who feel chronicall­y insufficie­nt and who suffer from imposter syndrome. This insecurity sets the stage perfectly for mental illness to flourish.

Another striking theme I noticed was that some women do not have grand ambitions, but are afraid to admit this publicly. In previous generation­s, women may have felt uncomforta­ble admitting a desire for a

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