Alex's story

Actress Alex Hamilton, 26, supports Samaritans
24:7 fundraising and awareness campaign. Alex called Samaritans for
support herself as a 16 year old teenager when she was bullied at
school. Here she describes how Samaritans helped her:-
“Throughout my years at High School in
Worcestershire I was the victim of bullying - physical and
mental.
This was possibly due to me being involved in
theatre from an early age both in and outside school and having my
picture up at school. I also had very long blonde hair which girls
first used to pull - they’d call me ‘Barbie’ from when I was about
13 - and then they began cutting it off.
I told my parents and teachers were told and
records kept of the bullying at school and the girls involved were
told to stop but it always started up again – both inside and
outside school, in the town. I was often followed home by four or
five girls.
Even though I was one of the lucky ones,
having my family’s complete support, I still blamed myself and felt
worthless and alone.
After receiving threatening phone calls, I was
cornered in a pub in town by two girls and attacked and had my nose
broken. By this time I was 16 and studying for my GCSE’s. I was
back at school within only a couple of days and had to be escorted
in and out of my exams for my own safety. At no time through all
this did I cry. I put up an emotional ‘brick wall’ to everything
and refused to ‘give in’. I took my exams and passed 10 GCSE’s at A
grades. Through all this we were receiving death threats by ‘phone
at home. I was still insisting I didn’t need any help. The girl who
had attacked me was taken to court.
Having gone back to school girls attacked a
friend of mine and I went to intervene and received broken ribs
this time. On this occasion Victim Support urged me to ‘phone
Samaritans for some emotional support.
I thought it was just for adults, how could
they help me?
I remember I ‘phoned Samaritans in the evening
and spoke to a woman who was clearly older than me as I was just 16
– I found this quite comforting. All that I did though was to say
that I needed someone to talk to and then I cried almost non-stop
for about an hour. It was an emotional release after years of
keeping everything locked inside me.
Just speaking to someone who didn’t judge but
understood and let me cry, something I’d tried my hardest not to
do, gradually allowed me to feel more in control and grow in self
confidence.
I called Samaritans again when I heard a lot
of girls at school ‘bitching’ about me at school after we’d done
our exams. I had just had enough. I came home and went to my room
and wouldn’t talk to my mum about it - although my mum’s great and
more like my best friend. She understood the situation so well and
just put the ‘phone next to me so that I could call Samaritans
alone. I did and on that occasion just chatted generally, again to
a woman about school, whether I would go back to school, what my
plans were for the future and my hopes in general. I didn’t really
talk about the bullying as such but talking just really helped me
lose that tension again.
I did go back to school but only for four
months or so and then decided it was time to move on. I had spent
the whole of that summer not leaving home. I do still feel some
fear going back to my home town - although I’ve since had some
apologies from some of those girls about what they put me through
all those years ago.
Since leaving school I’ve been to college,
toured the UK in theatre productions, taken the lead in a feature
film - “Movies” and spent a year at one of the best acting
conservatories in New York City, my place there being one of only
100 given to people from all over the world who went to audition,
and now, 10 years on, aged 26, I’m about to embark on an exciting
trip to Australia where I have secured an acting agent and
castings.
To do all of these things has taken strength
and I truly believe I wouldn’t have been able to believe in myself
had I not shared my feelings as a scared and empty 16 year old
girl.
I am in full support of the Samaritans 24:7
campaign and hope more and more young people - whether they are
being bullied or just need that someone to listen - will call or
email and start that healing process.
24 hours a day there is someone who cares
about you, someone who wants you to achieve your dreams and have
the bright and fulfilling future you deserve.”
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experiences