Mental Health Support for Chronic Illness: Navigating the Darkest Days
A gentle note before we begin: This post is raw and honest. We’re talking about the darkest days of chronic illness, including thoughts of wanting to give up and unhealthy relationship dynamics. If you aren’t in a place to read this right now, that is okay.
If you are in immediate danger or need to talk to someone right now, please reach out:
- Lifeline: 13 11 14
- 1800RESPECT: 1800 737 732
- Beyond Blue: 1300 22 4636
I am a coach and a fellow chronic illness sufferer, not a medical professional or therapist. Please seek professional help if you are struggling.
Let’s be real.
Nobody tells you that chronic illness doesn’t just take your body. It takes your sense of self. It takes your relationships. It takes the version of you that you used to recognise in the mirror. And some days, some really dark days, it makes you wonder if there’s any point in fighting anymore, which is exactly why mental health support for chronic illness matters.
I’ve been there.
Crying in the shower because it’s the only place no one can hear. Staring at myself and not recognising the person looking back. Wondering if my kids would be better off without this version of me, the one who can barely get through the day, the one whose body has become a stranger, the one who doesn’t know if she’s the problem in her relationship or if something much darker is happening.
If you’re reading this and nodding, I need you to know something: You are not broken. You are not weak. You are surviving something that most people will never understand.
And this post? It’s not about fixing you. It’s about sitting with you in the mess and showing you where the exits are, because even when you can’t see them, they exist.
Mental Health Support for Chronic Illness: When Your Body Becomes the Enemy
There’s a specific kind of grief that comes with chronic illness. It’s not talked about enough.
It’s the grief of losing your “before” self. The one who could plan things without factoring in flares. The one who didn’t have to ration energy like it was a finite resource. The one whose hair wasn’t falling out in clumps because of medication that’s supposed to be helping.
The medication side effects alone can break you. Weight changes. Hair loss. Brain fog so thick you forget words mid-sentence. And then people say, “At least you’re getting treatment,” as if the treatment isn’t its own kind of trauma.
Here’s the truth most people won’t tell you: grieving your healthy self is valid. Being angry at your body is valid. Feeling betrayed by the very thing that’s supposed to keep you alive? Completely bloody valid.
You’re not ungrateful for struggling. You’re human.

Unhealthy Relationship Dynamics: Mental Health Support for Chronic Illness
This part is hard to write. But I know I’m not the only one.
When you’re chronically ill, everything gets tangled. Your emotions. Your reactions. Your ability to tell what’s real and what’s the illness talking.
And if you’re in a relationship that feels…off? It becomes almost impossible to trust your own perception.
Am I being unreasonable because I’m in pain?
Am I overreacting because my nervous system is shot?
Is this an unhealthy dynamic, or am I just too much to deal with right now?
Let me be clear: Your illness does not make you deserving of mistreatment. Being unwell does not mean you forfeit the right to kindness, patience, and respect. If someone is making you feel like your struggles are a burden, like you’re crazy, like you should be grateful they’re still around, that is not love. That’s an unhealthy dynamic.
Let’s be real about the “trade-off” feeling. Sometimes a partner says or implies, “I take care of you, so don’t question my addictions,” or “I do everything around here, so you owe me,” or “If you bring this up, I’ll stop helping.” Caretaking is not a free pass for harmful behaviours. Support doesn’t cancel out patterns like heavy drinking, yelling, threats, disappearing, stonewalling, or using your illness as a reason they don’t have to be accountable. Real care doesn’t require you to shrink to keep the peace.
If you’re genuinely unsure, that confusion is a sign you deserve support from someone outside the situation. A therapist. A counsellor. A trusted friend. Or a confidential support service where trained people can help you untangle what’s happening and make a plan that keeps you safe.
1800RESPECT: 1800 737 732 – a place to talk things through and untangle confusion about relationship dynamics. You don’t need bruises, labels, or proof to reach out. Confusion counts. Needing someone to help you figure it out counts.
Suicidal Ideation Help: When the Darkness Gets Too Dark
So let’s talk about the thing we’re not supposed to say out loud.
Sometimes, when the pain is relentless, when your body won’t cooperate, when your relationships are fracturing, when you look in the mirror and don’t recognise yourself, sometimes the thought creeps in:
What if I just…stopped?
Maybe it’s not even a plan. Maybe it’s just exhaustion so deep that existing feels like too much. Maybe you’ve hurt yourself, not because you truly want to die, but because the physical pain is easier to understand than the emotional tornado inside you.
I see you. And I’m not going to tell you to “stay strong.”
What I am going to tell you is this: that thought, that urge, that moment of wanting it all to end, it’s a symptom. It’s your brain and body screaming that they’re overwhelmed and under-resourced. It’s not the truth about your worth. It’s not a reflection of your value as a mother, a partner, a person.
It’s a signal that you need more support than you currently have. And getting that support is not weakness. It’s survival.
Mental Health Support for Chronic Illness: Where to Get Help Right Now
If you’re in Australia and you’re struggling, here are real humans who want to help you:
- Lifeline – 13 11 14 – Crisis support, suicidal thoughts, emotional distress
- Beyond Blue – 1300 22 4636 – Depression, anxiety, mental health support
- Suicide Call Back Service – 1300 659 467 – Professional counselling for suicide-related concerns
- 1800RESPECT – 1800 737 732 – Domestic violence, relationship abuse, sexual assault
- SANE Australia – 1800 187 263 – Complex mental health, trauma, chronic conditions
You can also text or chat online if calling feels too hard. Most of these services have webchat options on their websites.
You don’t need to be “bad enough” to reach out. If you’re struggling, you qualify. Full stop.

Nervous System Reset: When You Can’t Do Anything, Do This
I’m not going to give you a list of 47 things to “boost your mood.” When you’re this deep in the darkness, that kind of advice feels like a slap in the face.
Instead, here’s what I want you to try, just one thing:
Take one breath. Just one.
Not a meditation. Not a routine. Just one inhale, one exhale, and then decide if you want to take another.
That’s it. That’s the whole task.
If you can do that, you can try one more tiny thing: put your hand on your chest and feel your heartbeat. That’s your body fighting for you, even when your mind has given up. Your heart is still showing up.
If you want something to anchor you in those moments, I created the FREE 60 Second Nervous System Reset Cards for exactly this. They’re not about fixing you. They’re about giving your overwhelmed nervous system one small thing to focus on when everything feels like too much.
You’re Not Alone in This: Trauma Recovery Isn’t Linear
I know it feels like you are. I know it feels like everyone else is handling their lives while you’re drowning. I know it feels like you’re too much and not enough at the same time.
But there are thousands of us. Women with chronic illness, navigating dark days, questioning our relationships, mourning our old selves, trying to be good mothers while barely keeping our heads above water.
You are not the only one who has felt this way. And you won’t be the last.
But you can be one of the ones who reaches out. One of the ones who lets someone else carry part of the weight. One of the ones who’s still here tomorrow, and the day after, and the day after that.
I believe that’s possible for you. Even if you don’t believe it yet.
Your Next Step
If this post found you in a dark place, please do one thing today: tell someone. A friend. A family member. A counsellor. A stranger on a helpline. You don’t have to explain everything. You can just say, “I’m not okay and I need support.”
And if you want to learn more about who I am and why I write these posts, I’m here. I’m not a perfect person with a perfect life. I’m someone who knows what rock bottom looks like: and I’m still here, fighting for the good days.
You deserve to fight for yours too.
Even when shit gets dark, you still shine. I promise.

If this hits you hard….
You’re exactly who I write for. You don’t have to grieve this alone.
- Download my FREE 60 Second Nervous System Reset Cards
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Briony Bianca
Hi, I'm Briony
I’ve lived through trauma, chronic illness, and a lifetime of being misunderstood. Now, I’m here to turn my pain into purpose. This space is for women who feel unseen, exhausted, or broken but still want to heal, grow and find light again – in real, imperfect ways.
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