Layton says mental scars toughest
F ormer Australian netball captain Sharni Layton says she’d trade all her physical injuries to avoid her mental health battle.
F ormer Australian netball captain Sharni Layton says she’d happily trade all her physical injuries from the sport to avoid the mental health battle that has stalled her international career.
Layton hasn’t played for the Diamonds since mid 2017, with the national body saying she was taking an extended break due to “exhaustion”. She missed selection for next month’s Commonwealth Games after winning gold with the team in Glasgow in 2014.
But the 29-year-old Collingwood defender opened up on her struggle with mental health on the sports website 20FOUR.
Talking through tears, Layton said she had been in a “really bad spot mentally”. “I took time off to be able to get my head right and to seek help — I didn’t realise how bad I was,” Layton said.
“After taking some time off I realised that I wasn’t OK and it was going to take a bit longer to get back than I had hoped.”
Layton said she still didn’t really understand her illness, but attributed it to taking too much on.
At the start of the Super Netball competition in 2016, the goalkeeper was everywhere to promote the sport as well as training hard with the Magpies and for the Test side.
“I’m a bull at a gate and I was probably trying too much and had a bit much on my plate trying to push the sport, play my best netball, trying to do everything,” she said.
Layton said it was harder to deal with than a physical problem. “The amount of injuries I’ve had have put me out for a good two years of rehab and I would rather have them all at one time than a mental health injury because you have a plan and you know what you’re doing,” she said. “When you don’t know what’s going on in your head it’s pretty scary.”
AAP