Cry For Help

Heartbroken mum reveals her daughter,16, wrote a cryptic ‘help me’ note before taking her own life and it was found hours after her death

A MUM has revealed how a heartbreaking cryptic message was found in her teenage daughter's room just hours after she died – and she is now using it to help other depressed teens.

Maisie Cousin-Strik was just 16 when her body was found in woodlands near her sister Amy’s home in Misterton, Nottinghamshire.

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Maisie Cousin-Stirk, pictures in 2015, was just 16 when she died six weeks agoCredit: PA Real Life

Hours later, Amy was in the teenager’s bedroom when she found the note which appeared to read “I’m fine” but, when turned upside down, it read “help me.”

Distraught mum, Helen Cousin, 46 – who was identifying Maisie’s body at the mortuary at the time – believes her daughter was depressed and took her own life.

Admitting she had no idea Maisie was depressed, Helen said: “I never thought she would do this. We were very close and she was always by my side. I really thought she could talk to me about anything.

“I had no idea she was hiding these feelings and I hope that I can just help other teenagers now to speak to someone before it is too late.”

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Maisie, who was deciding whether to go to college and complete a childcare course or go to sixth form to do her A-Levels, died six weeks ago, on June 19 – just days after completing her GCSE exams, the results of which her mum will receive later this month.

It was the day of her school leavers’ assembly, but she had decided not to go.

The last picture of Maisie, taken the day before she diedCredit: PA Real Life

“Normally I would have a chat with her before work, but I thought she’d want to lie in on her first day off,” recalled Helen. “Just before I left, she shouted out to me and I said a quick goodbye.”

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In the days before her tragic death, Helen, Maisie and her younger brother Oliver, 12, had been planning for their family holiday together at the beginning of August to Crete.

Helen said: “We had such a lovely day on the Saturday before she died. The sun was shining and we went to the optician to get Maisie her first pair of prescription sunglasses. She was really excited about going away. We were making plans for the summer.

The cryptic note appeared to read 'I'm Fine' one way upCredit: PA Real Life
Turned the other way, the note reads 'help me'Credit: PA Real Life
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She continued: “I remember walking through town behind Maisie and Oliver and just thinking how lucky I was.”

Maisie, a high achiever who was expected to get A*’s, A’s and B’s, had finished her exams and decided not to go to the leavers’ assembly at school as it was optional.

On June 19, Maisie spent the morning with Amy and her children Joel, three, and Scarlett, nine months.

Helen said: “She loved her nieces and nephews and they couldn’t wait to spend time with her. Her older brother Luke, 24, also has a little girl called Esme, one.

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“Maisie spent most of her free time with them and wanted to work with kids when she was older. It breaks my heart that there are three little people who won’t have auntie Maisie anymore.”

Maisie with her mum, Helen, and brother OliverCredit: PA Real Life

Maisie told her sister she was going to the shop to buy some cookies but, instead, she went home and took the family dog Diesel for a walk.

Helen caught sight of her at around 3pm that afternoon, heading home from her walk across the fields around the primary school where she works, just behind their family house.

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But when she got home at 5.30pm, after working extra hours helping with cleaning, she realised Maisie was not home and assumed she was still with her sister.

Oliver, Helen, Maisie and Amy in 2015Credit: PA Real Life

Helen said: “She was a 16-year-old so she was used to doing her own thing.

“I just thought she was spending time with her niece and nephew, or maybe she was at her dad’s.”

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Helen took Oliver to youth club, but on her way home at 6.30pm, she received a message from Maisie’s best friend, asking if she had spoken to her, as she hadn’t heard from her all day.

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Concerned by the message, Helen rang Amy, but Maisie was not with her.

She also called Maisie’s dad Mick, who lives nearby, but he hadn’t seen her either.

Anxious, as she ran out of places to check, Helen phoned the police, reporting Maisie missing.

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Within an hour of posting about her daughter on Facebook, the community formed a search party – scouring fields and streets, looking for Maisie.

Maisie’s mum believes her daughter was depressed and took her own lifeCredit: PA Real Life

Helen said: “I had all sorts of things running through my head. It was really hot that day and I thought maybe she had passed out somewhere. I never imagined she would do anything to hurt herself.”

Sadly, around 5am, Amy’s partner Liam Hunter, 24, was on the phone to Helen, when he discovered Maisie’s body in a lane, only a few minutes from their house.

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Helen said: “I just screamed and screamed. I couldn’t believe this had happened to us.

“I had no idea that Maisie was feeling so bad that she felt she had to do this. I don’t know why and I don’t think I ever will.”

The next day, Helen and Mick travelled to Nottingham to identify Maisie’s body.

Maisie, pictured with her niece Esme, was considering a career in childcareCredit: PA Real Life
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Trying to feel closer to her sister, Amy looked through the things she had left in her bedroom and discovered the note, carrying the two opposing messages – showing it to her mum when she got home.

“I couldn’t stop thinking about the note,” Helen said. “There are kids out there, like Maisie, who don’t talk about their problems or seem to be upset. This summed it up for me.”

She continued: “I woke up in the middle of the night and realised I wanted to use her doodle to do something positive. I looked at a few companies then and emailed the Lapel Pin Company about creating some badges, carrying the same message, and in the morning I woke up to a response them.”

As they prepared for Maisie’s funeral at Misterton on 13 July, 750 of the badges arrived and Helen shared them with friends and family.

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Maisie as a child, with little brother OliverCredit: PA Real Life

Within days, they had all gone  and Helen decided to do something positive with the raised by their sale and a justgiving page set up in Maisie’s memory, using her cryptic note as the logo for her campaign.

The family are also raising money through justgiving to create a sensory garden at the primary school where Helen works.

In addition, Helen is fundraising  for the suicide prevention charity Papyrus, who she hopes to work with  to train teachers and school staff across the country in  how to deal with depression and suicidal thoughts in young people.

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Maisie has juts finished her GCSE's and was expected to get high gradesCredit: PA Real Life

And, despite still struggling to come to terms with her grief, Helen is determined to speak out to help other children.

“Maisie was a fantastic daughter. She was doing well at school. She didn’t have loads of friends, but I think she wanted it that way and she had a few very close friends. I know they had fallings out and there were stresses and worries but I thought those were just normal teenage things.

“She didn’t leave any letters or anything explaining why. I have so many unanswered questions but now I just want to raise money and awareness so maybe I can stop another family having to go through this.”

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A stressed teenager recently took his own life over a £600 rail fine.

A horrifying social media trend called the Blue Whale Suicide Challenge, which encourages kids to take their own life, has recently been linked to over 130 deaths.

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