A day in the life of a stalkers victim
Being stalked can send people
dipping into the realms of paranoia, and they come to realise that
uncertainty is here to stay
expect that under anyones serene
exterior lie untold secrets. Mine relate to my stalker. Superficially,
the humdrum of life continues, with routine largely unruffled.
Underneath, however, even though my stalker interferes far less in a
physical sense than in previous years, the problem never goes
away.
It is now more than four years
since I realised that a patient had begun to follow me. While on my
list, the patient led me a merry dance of lies and bizarre behaviour.
When I finally realised that this saga was all a fabrication and
removed the patient from my list, the stalking began. This is where my
sense of control left me. How do you apply rational thought to
something illogical and unpredictable? Such is mental illness. I can
only understand it in the following terms: the stalker had made such an
emotional investment in this fantasy world of which I had become a
part, that it was too great to be
abandoned.
The questions began early
on. What constitutes stalking? Being followed in a car sounds
straightforward enough, or was it coincidence? Ive given up on
the idea of coincidence with this person, but when I have reported the
behaviour to the police, frightening episodes have suddenly sounded
incredibly mundane and ordinaryhardly a threat and quite
possibly coincidence.
Keep a
log, I was told. My log now reads like the obsessive diary of a
sad introspective.
Was
walking outside my
house.
Was walking by
the traffic lights on the school-run
route.
Was standing at
the end of my childminders
road.
The childminding bit is
the one that got me. Dabble with me if you must, but you can leave my
kids out of it. This is where anger really crept in and why I remain
anxious. The police were very helpful at this stagetheres
nothing like a child protection issue to generate an initial response.
But police action can be remarkably slowweeks for an arrest,
while my mind was in turmoil.
At
this stage, when activity from the stalker was frequent, and I felt
goaded into some sort of action and could no longer ignore it, I found
myself dipping into the realms of paranoia. I examined every car,
studied every number plate, my stomach lurching if I glimpsed an
abnormal loping gait. I remembered the phrase, Just because
youre paranoid doesnt mean theyre not out to get
you. Often my anxious gaze would find not reassuring strangers,
but that face again.
I tried a
helpline. I wanted a good kick up the behind, I thought; pull myself
together, put things back in perspective. After all, the stalker
wasnt even particularly threateningjust notes, silent
phone calls, frequent followings, and sightings. Not the stuff of
Hollywood. The helpline was laughable. The paranoia from the other end
of the line certainly put my anxieties in orderthe counsellor
was a victim who had suffered considerably more than I had. It was
questionable who needed the
counselling.
I came away confused
but relieved. To interpret the messages I had received as death
threatsas the helpline had suggestedwould have been
absurd. Yet in an odd way, the helpline did give me support. It raised
two choices in my mind. I could fall in love with the glamour and
intrigue of having a stalker, or I could try much harder to gain
perspective, assess the actual risk posed to myself and family (which
is probably pretty low), and take control of the endless ruminations in
my head.
Practical help was still
variable. An injunction would have cost me over £1000 and make
little difference. All attempts to get psychiatric help to the patient
failed. Although the police were supportive and the Harassment Act 1997
gives some scope for a legal response, the police were reluctant to
take the stalker to court, saying that there was insufficient evidence.
However, being arrested modified the stalkers behaviour to some
extent. In fact, for a few months I even thought the stalking had
ended.
But therein lies the problem. It is just as with people
with cancer, who hope that surgery has cured themthey cannot
know for sure. Just as their physical scars remind them of the trauma
of surgery, pain in the operation site brings back fear of the disease,
and follow up appointments reawaken their and their families
anxieties, so my ailment is frequently at the front of my
mind. That car! There are cars like that everywhere, and so my number
plate checking continues. I feel guilty if I need to visit patients
near the stalkers addressam I secretly asking for more
trouble? I hesitate to stick to old
routines.
Looking back, is there a
sense of winning or losing? Perhaps winning, in as far as my faith in
patients has not really altered. Bizarre stories (common in my line of
work) do not make me assume the patient is mad or manipulative. I
realise that uncertainty is here to stayshould I ignore the
current low key intrusions or should I come down on them like a ton of
bricks? I just dont know and so do
nothing.
studentBMJ 2002;10:89-130 April ISSN 0966-6494