Canadian envoy to UN says past mental health fight has her ready for COVID-19
OTTAWA — As she watched the novel coronavirus swallow a helpless New York City, transforming it into the twin epicentre of the pandemic, Louise Blais found lessons in her own past for how to slay a demon.
Blais, one of Canada’s two deputy ambassadors the United Nations, survived the post 9/11 anthrax scare as a young diplomat and mother in Washington, D.C. But less than a decade later, it all came crashing down while she was serving in Paris.
Blais suffered a massive nervous breakdown that stopped her life and career. She lost weight and the will to eat, suffered facial paralysis, heart palpitations and numerous other symptoms. She realizes now that she was also felled because she was a bad boss, whose hard-driving style sparked a staff mutiny.
“I had a massive burnout in Paris 10 years ago. I basically had to rebuild myself from scratch,” Blais, 53, said over the telephone this week from her New York home office.