Gloucestershire Echo

» How Victoria Pendleton overcame her battle with depression Celebrity Wellbeing

AFTER FLOORED DEPRESSION, BEING BY FORMER OLYMPIC CHAMP VICTORIA PENDLETON TELLS LIZ CONNOR HOW SHE FOUND THERAPY IN SURFING

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VICTORIA PENDLETON was one of Team GB’S biggest success stories in the London Olympic Games. During a hot and sticky summer in 2012, the sports star pedalled to victory in the velodrome, taking home the keirin gold and sprint silver, before retiring with nine world champion titles to her name.

But last year, Victoria found herself facing a different kind of challenge, after an attempt to climb Mount Everest went awry. She was tackling the world’s highest mountain with her friend Ben Fogle for an ITV documentar­y, but was forced to abandon the mission after suffering dangerous hypoxia (oxygen deprivatio­n).

What followed was a period of severe depression that left the athlete – in her own words – “psychologi­cally and physiologi­cally damaged”, which doctors have suggested could have been triggered by the effects of hyproxia on the brain.

The 38-year-old experience­d suicidal thoughts and, at one very low point, says she was counting out the amount of drugs she’d need to take her own life.

“To feel that helpless and vulnerable was something that was really quite new to me,” she says, reflecting on her lowest point last summer. “I tried to deny it for a long time. I kept thinking, ‘This isn’t me.’

“My heart would be racing and I’d try to ignore it, while telling myself, ‘It’s fine, it’ll stop in a minute’, but then it’d develop into an anxiety attack.”

Although she’s previously spoken about struggling with self-harm at the height of her cycling career, Victoria says her recent battle with depression caught her completely off guard, flooring her when she least expected it.

“The whole episode I went through last summer really blindsided me. I didn’t see it coming,” she admits.

“I always think that I can

muscle through anything. That if I just grit my teeth and get stuck in, I’ll beat it. But unfortunat­ely mental health is not something you can necessaril­y do that with – which was hugely frustratin­g for me. I had to learn to manage it a little bit differentl­y.

“It’s strange, you think:

‘I can win Olympic gold medals, I should be able to beat this.’ But it doesn’t work that way.”

Choosing to forgo anti-depressant­s, Victoria turned to sports to help pull herself out of the darkness. Throwing herself against the turbulent surf of the coast of Costa Rica, she says, was the best therapy for her.

“After being prescribed lots of medication, which I soon realised does not suit me at all, I took myself surfing, alone, for a month,” she explains. “I knew

I needed to go and do something physical and challengin­g, in a different environmen­t.

“[Medication] definitely didn’t suit me. I tried it and I wanted it so badly to work

– and to fix me. Ultimately I needed to fix myself.”

The former cyclist found the adrenaline rush of catching a wave allowed her to enter a state of hyper-focus, enabling her to forget everything else that was going on in her mind.

“When you’re paddling and there’s a huge wave coming in, you have to get over it – otherwise you’re going to be pounded by the whitewash,” she says.

“Don’t get me wrong, there were days where I was dragging my surf board through the sand with tears streaming down my face, thinking, ‘I don’t know why I’m doing this’,” she recalls. “But after 10 minutes of paddling for my life, the world seemed like a better place.”

A year on, Bedfordshi­reborn Victoria says she feels An aborted bid to climb Everest with Ben Fogle was the catalyst for a period of depression for Victoria

like she’s found the coping mechanisms that work for her. “I know that for me, being in a place where I can focus and work hard physically, in an environmen­t that’s slightly dangerous – to be perfectly honest – helps to rebuild my confidence and my strength in myself.

“That’s my happy place!” she adds with a laugh.

“The whole episode has definitely made me more aware of my mental wellbeing and more vigilant to things that make me feel a little bit out of sorts.

“If I’m feeling a certain way, I won’t let it spiral. I’ll try and nip it in the bud early, or do something or speak to somebody before it gets into a situation that could potentiall­y make me feel really bad.”

Although she says she doesn’t miss competing as a cyclist, Victoria can still be found on two wheels – although these days, you’re more likely to see her on the back of a 675cc engine, having recently passed her motorcycle test. When I bring up the subject, her voice lights up. “Oh my gosh,” she exclaims. “I tell you what, this Triumph Scrambler [she rides a Triumph Street Triple], the noise it makes when it’s rumbling inside my helmet – I love it!

“I’ve always wanted to be a biker chick,” she enthuses. “Ticking stuff off my bucket list makes me happy – so this bike makes me really happy.”

Speaking to Victoria, you get the sense that she isn’t hiding anything from the outside world – her honesty is as refreshing as her boundless enthusiasm for daredevil sports.

“I’ve never been closed on any aspect of how I feel and I think that’s something I take pride in, to be perfectly honest. Just because you might struggle a bit with mental health issues, doesn’t mean you can’t still be an Olympic champion or achieve whatever you want to.

“It’s not a barrier to stop you,” Victoria affirms. “It might slow you down, but it won’t stop you, and I think that’s important for people to understand.”

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 ??  ?? Olympian Victoria Pendleton has been open about her mental health struggles
Olympian Victoria Pendleton has been open about her mental health struggles
 ??  ?? Golden moment: Victoria celebratin­g at London 2012
Golden moment: Victoria celebratin­g at London 2012
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