Before the summer holiday, the woman from Human Resources from my board called again to schedule a meeting. I was surprised because the company doctor told me to focus on my healing process first. And because of what happened between my board members and me, she advised a mediator.

I asked the woman from Human Resources not to call me again because I had been honest with her. I told her all about my medical issues. The way she and my supervisor handled things so far influenced my healing process in a negative way. It caused a lot of stress; I could cope with it. It made me feel terrible for over a week when I had contact with them. I didn’t felt understood and believed.

I felt like the black sheep on my board getting happy and excited about fake assignments.

At first, I didn’t know what was wrong with me. Sleeping a lot, feeling down and sad, not able to concentrate anymore. Later I noticed these things appeared when I had to meet or speak with people related to work. I had the feeling I always had to defend myself too (the women from Human Resources, my supervisor, the absence consultant, the company doctor). I was feeling bad for two weeks when I had an appointment. That kept me away from healing.

Before the summer holiday, I tried to apply to another board for a principal function. I had a lot of trouble preparing for the job interview because I couldn’t remember what I read. Because of what I had gone through, I lost my belief in a supervisor and board. In the job interview, it wasn’t me who sat there, but a woman grieving about losing a job at a board I was so proud to work for.

I noticed I was still far away from going to work again. Even if I wanted to work so badly because I love what I do. I knew I had to heal first. I wanted to do so as quickly as possible. Luckily it was almost the summer holiday, so my board was gone and unable to interrupt my healing process.

Written by

Daphne

DAPHNE IN STOCKINGS is a writer with a blog telling her story about surviving blood clots, living with FVL, blood thinners, and stockings. And coping with Covid-19 twice in 2020. She's telling her story about building resilience in a physical and mental struggle to heal.