An Unquiet Mind: A Memoir of Moods and Madness | Kay Redfield Jamison | Just what I needed
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An Unquiet Mind: A...
An Unquiet Mind: A Memoir of Moods and Madness
Kay Redfield Jamison
Vintage
, 1996 - 240 pages
average customer review:
based on 332 reviews
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highly recommended
mania
A sad and yet a beautiful account of a young lady's struggle with bipolar and manic depression. Even in her writing (from the choppyness) you can tell that her
mind
is struggling with this
madness
. She lets you know that her mind is not the only thing effected by her condition, that it also consumed her body makeing her weak at times and active at others. Even though I loved to read it I would still like to have read about her theraputic approach to dealing with her condition. It's always nice to know how her family and her collegues reacted to her condition as well.
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Just what I needed
As someone who has only recently been diagnosed, reading this book helped me feel less alone. Because the author so clearly describes her experiences and her feelings about them, it has also helped me better understand which of my symptoms may be attributed to this illness versus other conditions and recognize things that I never thought were out of the norm.
An unquiet mind
It is a very informative book if you want to understand the personal experience of someone with Bipolar illness.
It helped me understand Bipolar disorders.
This book was so helpful in understanding the struggles of people with bipolar. It was very easy to read and understand. I was so impressed by Kay Redfield Jamison's openness in sharing the conflicts and confusions she experienced. Her successes were an encouraging to all of us who love someone with a bipolar disorder.An
Unquiet
Mind
: A
Memoir
of
Moods
and
Madness
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Never give it to a manic-depressive sufferer to read!!
An
Unquiet
Mind
: A
Memoir
of
Moods
and
Madness
Having two close relatives with manic-depressive illness, I felt rather compelled to read this title. Moreover, two good acquaintances of mine recommended me to examine it. It turned out to be a great and insightful experience that let me be cognizant of the turmoil that manic-depressive sufferers have to deal with. Dr. Kay Jamison does a superb job at describing the symptoms of this illness and pinpoints the reasons behind its sufferers trying to avoid taking their medication:
First, as Jamison emphasizes, the disease is a hereditary ailment that she inherited from her father. It almost leads one to believe that manic-depressives should not have offspring. This disadvantage is, from my humble opinion and experience, offset by the true love and dedication that these sufferers have for their nieces and nephews as Jamison emphasizes in her work.
Second, the intermittent manic episodes and subsequent depressions make life, on the one hand delightful, and in the other hand dreadful. The manic episodes, she recalls, giving her energy, creativity, more that active sexual life, shopping sprees, and enjoyment in general. The depressions were dreadful, were she could not get out of her bed, enjoy "normal life", and even, at one time, attempted suicide taking an overdose of Lithium.
Third, Jamison was prescribed Lithium for her illnesses, which made her lack concentration, not being able to read or write, not performing well in sports, missing her manic episodes, and severe forms of intoxication. However, Lithium worked for her, so as did the wonderful psychiatrist that she was seeing, her psychotherapy, her incomparable physician friends and loving relationships- including her wonderfully involved family. Later on, she was lowered her dose of the medication to a more accurate one, and was able to continue with an extremely normal life. She emphasizes emphatically the reasons behind why sufferers want to stop taking their medications, albeit they are the rationale behind their wellness.
Being a clinical physician herself, and teaching about mood disorders at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, she was quite uneasy about letting others know about her ailment. Nevertheless, she had the will to do it, and here in this title are the results. Of course, because she was immersed in the psychiatric arena, she had a lot of medical support from physician friends and never in her life went into a psychiatry hospitalization ward, which is utterly common in manic-depressive sufferers.
This is a title a will recommend to relatives, friends and acquaintances of Bipolar I disorder sufferers, but which would never be given to read to a manic-depressive itself.
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