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Majella O'Donnell Opens Up About 10-Week Hospital Stay for Depression
The Irish Independent
January 20, 2026•2 days ago
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Majella O'Donnell revealed a 10-week hospital stay for severe depression. She described feeling "dead inside" and unable to communicate. Her GP referred her for psychiatric treatment, where her medication was changed and she underwent therapy. O'Donnell emphasized the importance of talking to someone when experiencing mental health struggles.
Ms O’Donnell was speaking ahead of tonight’s episode of RTÉ show High Road Low Road alongside husband Daniel during which the couple travel to city of Zadar in Croatia.
Ms O’Donnell has suffered with depression since her late teens and has been on anti-depressant medication since her mid-30s.
Although managing to keep the illness at bay while normally being able to get herself “out of a rut”, all semblances of a functional lifestyle dissolved in 2024 when depression reared its head again.
Returning her to “that dark old place” that she could not escape, Ms O’Donnell said that she could not see a way out of it.
"I just felt I've had enough of this. I can't do this anymore. I really can't. I'm just tired of it,” she said on the Oliver Callan show on RTÉ Radio 1.
It was after this decline in her mental health that she was referred to a psychiatric hospital by her GP which she said “straightened” her out.
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"They changed all my medication. Obviously, you do a lot of therapy, and you go to mind development things that you do, and all sorts of things when you're in there.
“It was very good, but I was completely burnt out when I went in. I mean, I don't think I spoke to Daniel or my daughter or anybody for about five weeks when I went in. I could not even talk because I had nothing to say at all.”
She admitted that, upon entry into the hospital for psychiatric treatment, she “relinquished” herself to healthcare professionals whom she said she entrusted with helping her.
"I was just sitting in a corner of the room just dead inside, almost.”
Recounting her first moments inside the hospital, Ms O’Donnell recalled her desperation to find a resolution to her anguish, a moment that she said left her feeling “terrified”.
"When I went in the first day, when I was sort of waiting in reception, if you like, I started saying: ‘I can't do this. I can't do this. No, I want to go home. I can’t stay here.’”
She added: “The nurses kind of came out and they were really, really nice and really calmed me down. I didn't come out of the room for about three or four days.”
Such was her state of mental anguish, Ms O’Donnell said she finally gathered the strength to send a text message to Daniel which she had struggled to do throughout her stay.
"I sent a text and I explained everything. I just said [...] ‘I've nothing to say. I'm just lost. Please give me the time. I love you all very much,’” adding: “l’ll be back in contact with you when I feel able.”
Although she accepts that the depression never really goes away entirely, she is urging people to share your problems with somebody.
"Every time you feel it, you talk. That's the thing is to talk and talk could just be ‘I'm in a bad place’, even if you don't want to go into details or anything, but just to say ‘I need help’.
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