Former tennis player Jelena Dokic says she came close to taking her own life
Dokic, seen playing at Wimbledon in 2011, retired from tennis in 2014. PHOTO|CNN
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Former Australian tennis player Jelena Dokic said she
"almost jumped off my 26th-floor balcony and took my own life" in a
candid, emotional Instagram post on Monday.
Alongside a close-up photo of herself, where she is red-faced
and teary-eyed as if she had been crying, Dokic wrote that on April 28 she came
close to taking her own life.
"Will never forget the day. Everything is blurry.
Everything is dark," she wrote.
"No tone, no picture, nothing makes sense ... just
tears, sadness, depression, anxiety and pain."
The 39-year-old also explained on Instagram how she had been
experiencing "constant feelings of sadness and pain" and that getting
professional help saved her life.
"The last six months have been tough. It's been
constant crying everywhere," she added. "From hiding in the bathroom
when at work to wipe away my tears so that nobody sees it to the unstoppable
crying at home within my four walls has been unbearable."
Dokic, who has worked as a broadcaster for Australian media
since retiring in 2014, won six WTA Tour titles and reached a career-high
position of fourth in the world rankings.
She reached the semifinals of Wimbledon in 2000 and the
quarterfinals of the French Open and Australian Open in 2002 and 2009
respectively.
In her Instagram post, she said she is "on the road to
recovery."
"Some days are better than others and sometimes I take
a step forward and then a step back but I'm fighting and I believe I can get
through this," Dokic said.
In her autobiography "Unbreakable," she detailed
allegations of physical, verbal, and mental abuse she says her father inflicted
on her throughout her tennis career. The New York Times reported that he denied
at least one allegation of physical abuse against his daughter when she was a
teenager.
"It's a very difficult subject that I talk about in the
book, not just my father and the whole amount of abuse that went on from the
age of six, pretty much, for over 20 years," Dokic said in an interview with CNN in 2018.
"I battled depression for a very long time, almost 10
years, and I almost committed suicide at one stage."
Dokic, who was born in Croatia before her family fled to
Serbia and then Australia as war broke out in the Balkans, told CNN she had
shared her experience in the hope it would "raise awareness of abuse,
domestic violence, in sport and also outside of sport."
At the time, Dokic's father Damir did not respond to CNN's
request for comment. He told Serbian daily Blic in 2009 that "there is no
child that was not beaten by parents, same with Jelena."
There was an outpouring of support in the comments section
of Dokic's post, including from the tennis community.
"I'm here for you and only a phone call away!"
wrote former Australian player Mark Philippoussis, while French star Alizé
Cornet added: "You can do this Jelena ... we love you!"
Dokic ended her post with a reminder to others who are also
suffering to get help, encouraging them not to be ashamed.
"I am writing this because I know I am not the only one
struggling. Just know that you are not alone.
"I am not going to say that I am doing great now but I
am definitely on the road to recovery."
She reminded people that it's okay to feel sad, but you have
to keep fighting back.
"Love you all and here is to fighting and surviving to
live and see another day. I will be back stronger than ever."


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