I'm sure this has already been discussed on numerous threads, but I'd just like to share my own recent experiences. My wife had a bad fall about 18 months ago, and injured herself severely enough to require surgery on her arm. This took quite some time to be done, and of course left her in a lot of pain in the meantime. To cut what could be a very long story short, the result of her pain, lack of sleep, extra workload, and the pressures of a stressful job resulted in me battling anxiety for most of the last year. I did my best to just push through it, but it eventually became severe enough to affect my work performance, and eventually I had to bite the bullet and speak with my GP, who couldn't have been more helpful, and diagnosed moderate to severe anxiety.
I immediately emailed my firearms licensing department to inform them of this, and that it had resulted in my GP prescribing Sertraline to help. The support and reassurance I received, not only from my GP, but from my FEO, and indeed the Inspector in charge of Police Scotland's firearms team was heart-warming to say the least. I actually received an email to thank me for bringing the matter to his attention, and that my actions had gone a long way to reassuring him that there was absolutely no need to restrict my access to my firearms.
I guess the point of this post is to highlight the importance of not being afraid to admit to needing help before it gets out of hand, and despite what some may say the police are not out to revoke FACs at each and every turn. Obviously I can only speak from my own experience, but the relief I've already experienced from merely bringing it out into the open has been immense.
Please, please don't try and deal with stuff like this on your own if you're struggling. Ask for help!
I immediately emailed my firearms licensing department to inform them of this, and that it had resulted in my GP prescribing Sertraline to help. The support and reassurance I received, not only from my GP, but from my FEO, and indeed the Inspector in charge of Police Scotland's firearms team was heart-warming to say the least. I actually received an email to thank me for bringing the matter to his attention, and that my actions had gone a long way to reassuring him that there was absolutely no need to restrict my access to my firearms.
I guess the point of this post is to highlight the importance of not being afraid to admit to needing help before it gets out of hand, and despite what some may say the police are not out to revoke FACs at each and every turn. Obviously I can only speak from my own experience, but the relief I've already experienced from merely bringing it out into the open has been immense.
Please, please don't try and deal with stuff like this on your own if you're struggling. Ask for help!