I flew through this. An urgent call to more person-centered forms of care. Personal autonomy is taken to be the most important aim for any serious form of support for people, over and above prescription. Some of the arguments are by now well known, the capture of care by big pharma, the time-compression of treatments, the criticisms of the medical model. That being said, they are handled in a critical way with particular focus on feminist readings. The chapter on psychedelics is notable for it acknowledges their strengths, in the emphasis on ritual and autonomy, while also being weary of medical capture, ie. excessive focus on the neuro-molecular aspects to the detriment of set and setting. The chapter on neurodiversity is also noteworthy, for it is a movement that uses the very tools of psychiatry against it, ie. the neuroscience model to open up the possibility for more individualised care instead of existing rigid diagnostic categories or one size fits all treatment.