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Journalist with anxiety calls for greater ‘neurodiversity’ in newsrooms

Debbie LuxonA regional journalist who suffers from anxiety has called for greater “neurodiversity” in newsrooms after opening up on her own mental health issues.

Debbie Luxon, community reporter at Cambridgeshire Live and the Cambridge News, has gone public on the “unique challenge” posed to journalists diagnosed with mental ill-health.

However, she has also advanced the benefits those with such issues can bring when “connecting with the vulnerable and disenfranchised”.

Debbie, pictured, spoke out in a piece for the National Council for the Training of Journalists marking Mental Health Awareness Week, which was last week.

She wrote: “Mental illness is isolating by its very nature, as well as being almost completely invisible. As a chronically anxious person, people are often surprised to learn of my diagnosis – being a bubbly and confident person on the surface.

“Being a journalist with diagnosed mental ill-health is a unique challenge. The job is emotionally demanding, often underpaid and under-resourced, as well as needing huge capacity for multitasking and lateral thinking.

“It would seem with this picture, that journalism isn’t a world for the neurodiverse. But journalism needs diverse people, maybe now more than ever.

“In some ways my anxiety is my superpower- it means I know what is happening with every one of my stories at any given moment and my emotional capacity is needed again and again for connecting with the vulnerable and disenfranchised in my work as a Facebook-funded community reporter.

“Having lived experience as a minority and a mentally unwell person, two things which often sadly go hand in hand, is invaluable when I can genuinely say to an interviewee, ‘I get it.’

“Though lived experience isn’t compulsory to have empathy and be a good reporter, it helps build trust. This kind of non-verbal understanding is what our society needs more when it comes to tackling the mental health crisis our country faces. It’s often what people are not saying that needs to be picked up on and could ultimately save a life.”

Debbie went on to explain how journalists can “normalise” convesations surrounding mental health.

She wrote: “When it comes to protecting my own mental health, I can’t say this job has always helped me do that. It’s taken me years to learn some very basic tools that could have saved a lot of pain, one of which is asking for help.

“This sounds fluffy, but as a trainee I needed support I didn’t get, partly because my colleagues didn’t know I needed it.

“Asking for regular feedback helped me feel more comfortable in my role. Venting to my colleagues when I had a difficult interview helped unload that emotional labour we carry in this job. Closing my laptop at 5pm and going outside. Accepting I’m not always going to have good days. Not always reading the comments section- some people live on the internet just to hate.

“Perhaps most annoyingly- making time for exercise. These are all small things, but cumulatively they are what made me feel most like myself in this very strange year we’ve had.

“Ultimately, we have a long road to travel before minorities and the neurodiverse are a normal sight in newsrooms and an even longer journey until the majority of people will understand mental illness to a degree in which they can help others.

“But writing about it, again and again, and making space in this industry, however small, is a start.”