He is affectionately known to his radio audience as ‘Mourne Man’, but behind the banter is a heartbreaking story about why Cool FM’s Paulo Ross has become passionate about walking Northern Ireland’s biggest mountain range.

Whatever I have going on in my head I leave at the bottom of the mountain for three or four hours. I go up the mountain and forget about it and pick it up later it

Paulo (28), originally from Ardglass, now lives in Belfast and is part of the Cool FM breakfast team along with Pete Snodden and Rebecca McKinney.  He and his family have been through a tough few years after his mum suddenly became ill with severe mental health problems.  Her illness saw her go from an outgoing, active woman who loved sport to self-harming and trying to take her own life.  It has been a tremendously difficult few years for Paulo, his brother and father, who at times felt helpless as they tried to get his mum the help she needed.

All three accessed family counselling through CAUSE and Paulo also benefited from one to one counselling with the Public Initiative for Prevention of Suicide and Self Harm (PIPS).

Paulo has bravely talked about what it is like to watch a loved one live with mental ill-health.

It was four years ago and out of the blue when his mum attempted to take her own life. Until that point she had hidden the anxiety which was building inside her.  

“Mum was always active and sporty, she played soccer and Gaelic football and was a referee and never really had any issues with mental health.  Just before she turned 50 it just came on to her all of a sudden — very, very suddenly, and she went drastically down with anxiety, low mood and she started self-harming.

It was tough to deal with and so unexpected. I got a call to say my mum is in hospital and had ­­taken an overdose.  Everything changes in a couple of minutes and you have to reorganise your thoughts and you ask yourself ‘Why?’ You think ‘But mum’s happy, what’s happened?  We had no idea. With physical health you can see the problem but with mental health it tends to stay hidden and builds up."

Life became a nightmare cycle of trips to the A&E and Paulo says there were literally hundreds of them over the next two years. Help was available but it was slow to come and it wasn’t until his mum suffered a psychotic episode that she was finally admitted to hospital and given the treatment she needed.  Paulo describes it as her brain shutting down under the pressure so that she didn’t know who she was and wasn’t able to recognise her own family.  He recalls the family’s frustration as they battled to get her the help she needed.  

"At first it was very difficult to get help,"  he says. “The waiting list is so long for proper help that the illness ends up spiralling deeper and you have countless trips to A&E through self-harming. It is not until the 10th or 15th time you self-harm or take an overdose you get a bit of priority and it is taken seriously.

Help is there but just not quick enough for some people. You have to be very persistent with the health service. It is quite evident that they are stretched. The staff are excellent, really caring and understanding, but they can only work with what they have got.

The system isn’t perfect. There was a period of a psychotic episode when she went missing — she didn’t know her name, she didn’t know who she was or her date of birth and she didn’t recognise her family, it was very tough.

It was like the flick of a switch in her head, her brain just turned off and switched down which is why she qualified for inpatient care.  This was after about two years of self harming that she was admitted to an inpatient mental health facility.  She stayed there for three months two summers ago and she came out of there and finally got access to weekly psychotherapy.  That helped significantly, that’s what she needed all along. She needed a couple of months away to get head space and no distractions to help her heal her own mind.”

The therapy has made a huge difference to his mum’s health, but it is a long, slow process and her recovery is continuing even today. 

 “It is life-changing for the person. It is very tough to rebuild your life again, it never really goes back to the way it was. Progress is there, and you just have to care for her but its hard. It can be almost contagious, when your family member is ill and it is a long-term illness — with mum, it’s now been four or five years. It can put you in a frustrating low mood and it can make you feel anxious. You are constantly living in fear because you are not sure what happens next, you are constantly waiting for relapse and it’s difficult to process in your mind.”

Paulo not only pushed for help for his mum but wisely sought support for himself.  For Paulo it has been a life-changing experience.

“I changed my thoughts on life. I stopped worrying about little small problems. It puts life in perspective. It is very emotionally draining but the way I see it is, some families are touched with cancer, some families are touched with heart conditions or premature baby deaths, and this is just the hand we were dealt. Everyone out there is dealing with something. We all put a brave face on and walk through town but behind the brave face everybody has their own stuff going on.”

I would just say to anyone who is going through a tough time, don’t be embarrassed to have a conversation. If you can’t have it with friends or family, try reaching out to CAUSE and things can get better. There is nothing to be embarrassed about. It is good that more people are starting to talk about mental health.