'I didn’t think I'd make it to my 15th birthday but now I am studying law'

Richard Canny
Latisha McCrudden’s long held dream of becoming a solicitor took a major step forward this year when she commenced a law degree at the University of Galway.
Attaining the Leaving Cert points required for law is one of many accomplishments on a long list for the young Traveller woman from the village of Lisacul in Co Roscommon.
Aged 19, Latisha has already compiled a range of distinctions, among them a Gaisce President’s award, a Pope John Paul II award and a Traveller Pride education award.
Recently, she was the winner in the ‘Special Achievement’ category at the local Garda Youth Awards, honoured as a “young person who has defied all the odds and whose commitment deserves recognition”.

Latisha has also worked as a mentor with Jigsaw as a mental health ambassador for young people, has spoken in the Oireachtas as a climate youth ambassador and competed in the BT Young Scientist Exhibition and SciFest.
Very proud to be called an activist, she has worked with a number of different organisations such as the Irish Traveller Movement, the National Women’s Council and the National Youth Assembly. It’s no surprise either that she hopes to enter the political arena in the near future.

“When I was 14, there was a time I thought I wouldn’t make it to my 15th birthday. Well, to be making it to my 19th birthday now, every birthday feels that extra bit significant to me because I didn’t think that, you know, I was going to make it past my 14th birthday,” said Latisha.
“I was always in flight or fight mode. The world was crashing around me at that time. I had depression. It was like a constant brick on top of my head. My head and eyes always felt heavy.
In the last four years, there’s definitely been one or two times again where you can feel it coming back
Despite all her achievements and now being in a very good place, she readily admitted that her mental health journey was far from finished. “In the last four years, there’s definitely been one or two times again where you can feel it coming back, and I would never want to get as bad as I was when I was 14.

She also didn’t feel ashamed to return to Pieta House in 2021 for help when she started to develop an eating disorder. Her passion for karate has also kept her going through tough times. “Going to training, even during my darkest times, I would have a slight bit of relief in the evenings after doing training because karate brings me so much joy.”
Latisha is proud to say that her mother Susan and grandparents continue to be a great source of strength for her, and she also glows about her 9- year-old sister Tulisha, ‘my little guardian angel’.

Even at such a young age, her journey is already illuminated with many achievements and awards, with clearly much more to come, not least a career in law as she begins her university studies.
This article was originally published in the Roscommon Herald by its deputy editor Richard Canny. Last Tuesday Richard won the national award in the Local Print and Online category of the Headline Mental Health Awards for this story.