[…] explain it’s a bit more complicated than that, is to be dismissed as an apologist. But read this tribute by Campbell to his brother, and you can hear the authentic voice of a man who loves well, if not […]
My brother Donald: please spread his story far and wide, and join the fight for better mental health
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Post
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14 August 2016
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Posted by Alastair Campbell
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31
16 minute(s) read
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31 responses to “My brother Donald: please spread his story far and wide, and join the fight for better mental health”
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Very sorry to hear of your loss Alastair, and wishing you continued strength in your mission to educate about mental health.
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Sincere hopes for the strength to withstand Donald’s funeral
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Alastair, I’m so terribly sorry for your loss. Thank you for sharing your brother with us. I wish I could have known him.
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Mental health much like grief is so fluid. Always seems so unfair that mental illness is seen by many in black and white terms. As I’ve said far too often, there’s nothing I can write here that will do justice to your brother Donald, your memories or your grief.
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[…] blog first appeared on Alastair’s blog, and can be read here Read […]
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Maybe we could design a special mental illness awareness ribbon. And to avoid the over proliferation of such things, it could double as an Iraqi deaths unawareness badge in order to commemorate the millions of people whose lives were destroyed by your actions as well as the undoubted mental agonies the people of that region have suffered.
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A lovely submission about a difficult person who was very likely his own worst enemy.
I have no idea where my own brother is and am sad to say it’s now making me angry. Is he in when I call round to his flat but just ignoring the bell and if so is it because I’ve done something I have no idea has offended him?
He’s just like our Dad who made sulking an art form.
Has he in fact been evicted from that fabulous flat that could have reaped at least five times the amount of rent charged by amazing un-greedy people?I’ve mentioned before a wonderful book (Hunger) by Knut Hamsun, (someone who could only have gained the insights he wrote about if he’d lived through that kind of rejecting and confusion) so no matter how angry I am I still wish I or someone more welcome could bring him back to the world.
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[…] This blog first appeared on Alastair’s blog, and can be read here1 […]
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Beautiful and very real eulogy. Clearly, so much love and admiration for an older brother. I wish I’d known Donald, sounds like a right character.
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Thank you for being so open and frank. My son was diagnosed 3 years ago at the age of 23 and my life will never be the same again, nor will it be for his brother and sister. But we live in hope, I know that if it were not for the NHS, the voluntary sector life would be hopeless and bleak. Things are not perfect and we have a long way to go but more of us need to speak out now and start thinking about how we help people like my son, your brother and countless others fulfill their potential.
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[…] Alistair Campbell tribute. […]
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Deepest Sympathy on the death of your dear brother Donald. I listened to you this morning giving an interview to Brendan O Connor on RTE and I can walk with you every step of the way as I also lost my daughter last year who also suffered from this very serious illness at age 34. Diagnosed at 15years of age she nevertheless stayed in school,passed her exams, and held down a good job for 15 years. Her employers ,a Government Department were incredibly supportive as were her work colleagues. Just as you described every few years she would stop taking her medication and would have to spend a few months in hospital to put her back on track. She was able to live independently ,drive her car etc. I am so proud of all she achieved in spite of her illness. I miss her very much and I applaud your efforts to demystify this very much misunderstood illness.
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[…] Pramukh Swami Maharaj who founded the Neasden Temple; Gloria DeHaven, star of 1940s MGM musicals; Donald Campbell, brother of Alastair; Terry Kane, one of the few Battle of Britain pilots to be taken prisoner; […]
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[…] a blog post on his website, he wrote: ‘It was a massive, horrible shock, even though we have always known that people […]
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[…] a blog post on his website, he wrote: ‘It was a massive, horrible shock, even though we have always known that people […]
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[…] a blog post on his website, he wrote: ‘It was a massive, horrible shock, even though we have always known that people […]
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[…] a blog post on his website, he wrote: ‘It was a massive, horrible shock, even though we have always known that people […]
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[…] a blog post on his website alastaircampbell.org, he wrote: ‘It was a massive, horrible shock, even though we have always known that people […]
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[…] a blog post on his website alastaircampbell.org, he wrote: ‘It was a massive, horrible shock, even though we have always known that people […]
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[…] a blog post on his website alastaircampbell.org, he wrote: ‘It was a massive, horrible shock, even though we have always known that people […]
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[…] a blog post on his website alastaircampbell.org, he wrote: ‘It was a massive, horrible shock, even though we have always known that people […]
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[…] a blog post on his website alastaircampbell.org, he wrote: ‘It was a massive, horrible shock, even though we have always known that people […]
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Sadly Donald was conned by the psychiatric system whose drugs killed him. Read the Mad in America webpages to find out the truth
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So sorry to hear about the loss of your brother Donald
Mental illness is something that can strike at any time to anyone young or old
It is slowly being better understood as an actual illness as opposed to a condition an individuAl can control
It is only by telling the story as you have and continue to do so that the condition will lose its stigma! -
I live in the Doncaster area and work in a local shop where from time to time a lovely gentlemen would come to do his shopping carrying his oxygen..always pleasant, kind and a pleasure to serve .a few weeks ago we commented that we hadn’t seen him , and it is with regret that on reading allister cambell s story we find our lovely gentleman was mr Campbell .
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RIP DONALDCONDOLENCES ALISTAIR THANK YOU FOR CONTINUING TO RAISE THE PROFILE OF MENTAL ILLNESS TORY CUTS TO MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES ARE A NATIONAL SCANDAL
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I just watched the BBC 2 show on depression and was shocked to hear about Donald’s death. I was a library assistant at Glasgow uni from 2001-2003 and got to know Donald well. I just assumed he would always be there sitting at the front door of the library or patrolling the floors. When I worked at the library at night I always felt reassured that Donald was on duty. He was a gentle giant and I was completely unaware that he was schizophrenic and on medication. It did not show at his workplace. He was a joy to talk to and he had a very calm demeanour and a presence that made you respect him. Rip Donald.
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[…] people who read Alastair’s account of his brother, Donald, and his eulogy at Donald’s funeral, will have been invigorated and cheered by such a positive […]
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[…] while we are on the mental health issue, with thanks to the many who commented at the weekend, here for those who may have missed it, is the eight year old obit to my brother Donald, the annivers…, and who remains my main inspiration in campaigning for better attitudes, understanding and above […]
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It’s now 27.12.2024... and this is still so powerful! Understanding, acceptance and empathy for people with mental health issue is only inching forward...
Keep on taking about it! We need more of it from people like you.
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