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US cyclist Kelly Catlin had been suffering from depression before her suicide last week, her family said. AFP/EMMANUEL DUNAND
Catlin, who took her own life last Thursday, had struggled with depression in the wake of two crashes last year and had also attempted suicide in January.
The 23-year-old had been part of the US team pursuit squads that captured world titles in 2016, 2017 and 2018 and also won a silver medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics.
However her father told the Washington Post on Monday she had struggled to recover after an accident last October which left her with a broken arm which was followed by a crash in December in which she sustained a concussion.
“She was not the Kelly that we knew,” her father Mark Catlin told the Post. “She spoke like a robot. We could get her to talk, but we wondered, ‘what has happened to our Kelly?’
“Everything was open to her, but somehow her thinking was changed and she couldn’t see beyond, I guess, her depression,” he added.
“After her concussion, she started embracing nihilism. Life was meaningless. There was no purpose. This was a person with depression.
“For her, she could no longer concentrate on her studies or train as hard. She couldn’t fulfill what she felt were her obligations to herself, she couldn’t live up to her own standards.”
Catlin’s sister Christine said her sibling had also complained of headaches and light sensitivity, and had written in an email that “her thoughts were racing all the time.”
“She was suicidal, her thinking was really dark, and she had taken to nihilism,” Christine Catlin said.
Catlin was studying computational and mathematical engineering at Stanford University while also attempting to pursue cycling. She was also an accomplished violinist and artist.
Mark Catlin said his daughter’s death was the result of a “perfect storm” of depression, concussion symptoms, overtraining and “not being able to say no.”
In a recent journal for the velonews.com website, Kelly Catlin had hinted in her struggle to juggle the different strands of her life.
“Being a graduate student, track cyclist, and professional road cyclist can instead feel like I need to time-travel to get everything done,” Catlin wrote. “And things still slip through the cracks.
“…But the truth is that most of the time, I don’t make everything work.”
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