Book Ends: The
Center Cannot Hold by Elyn R. Saks
Reviewed by
Columnist Kurt Sass
A
“broken brain” that accomplished a great deal
In the very
last chapter of Professor Elyn Saks’ book The
Center Cannot Hold: My Journey Through Madness,
she states that the reason she writes and speaks out is: “to bring
hope to those who suffer from schizophrenia, and understanding to
those to those who do not.” I just have one message for her:
Mission accomplished! After reading about all the trials and
tribulations that Ms. Saks has endured and survived, I believe anyone
who is fighting the daily battles with schizophrenia, or any other
psychiatric disability, will come out of the experience with a
renewed spirit. Also, I believe anyone who has never experienced
schizophrenia will find reading this book an extremely educational,
eye-opening experience.
One very
strong point about Ms. Saks’ writing is her honesty and candidness,
especially when it comes to her struggles with remaining on her
medication. Ms. Saks points to many instances when she is doing
fairly well, but then decides to lower or stop taking her medication
altogether and then almost immediately relapses into psychosis. Many
writers would not write anything at all that might shine a negative
light on themselves, but Ms. Saks explains the reasons why she (and
many others) make these decisions about stopping medications.
It took Ms.
Saks many years to come to terms with the fact that the medication
does help keep the psychotic thoughts away and that she must continue
to take it, even when feeling well. She discovered the reason she
would stop taking medication was that she would feel that each time
she put a pill in her mouth it was a reminder that her brain was
profoundly broken and defective, and that by taking pills she wasn’t
being her authentic self.
In addition,
Ms. Saks said she had to come to terms and accept that she had a
mental illness. She tells the story of an analogy a friend told her
about a riptide, that your first instinct is to fight it, and you use
all your energy fighting it. Ms. Saks was using all her energy
fighting her diagnosis of mental illness by stopping her medication.
Once she accepted the diagnosis and allowed the medication to do its
job, things continued to get better.
Ms. Saks
also goes into great detail about the importance of talk therapy as
well as medication in her recovery. There were many examples in the
book when she was completely off medication and feeling psychotic and
either reached out to others (friends, therapists, etc) or they
reached out to her.
Perhaps the
most powerful part of the book is the amazing disparity of treatment
she received while going through her various psychotic episodes. Many
times it simply came down to a matter of who noticed the behavior or
which hospital she was admitted to. The most blatant example of this
was when she was admitted to one hospital (she was talking
incoherently, but not behaving violently at all) and put in
four-point restraints for days. Just a short time later, exhibiting
the same exact behavior, a different hospital nearby felt that no
restraints were necessary at all. And it turns out they weren’t
needed.
Professor
Saks is a Graduate of Oxford University and is a Professor at the
University of Southern California Gould School of Law. She was able
to achieve all this while having numerous psychotic episodes
throughout the years.
The
Center Cannot Hold: My Journey Through Madness has
won numerous book awards and was on the Time
magazine
top ten best-sellers list for Non-Fiction books.
Pullout:
“...each time she put a pill in her mouth it was a reminder that
her brain was profoundly broken and defective, and that by taking
pills she wasn’t being her authentic self.”
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