I purchased this book to educate myself on antidepressant withdrawal. I really admired Brookes strength of coming off all of those drugs and continued to live and get better with time.
However, it seems that this book poses that travelling the world is the answer to one's problems. I also travelled for several years, and of course, it's an amazing way to discover different cultures and explore humanity in all its facets. It's also a great way to see that there is more to life than your typical 9-5, but it's not the be-all and end all in terms of recovering from poor mental health. I think if there's trauma that hasn't been properly dealt with, then you will carry it wherever you go in the world.
It was only when I stayed in one place that I began seeing a professional therapist regularly and began the hard inner graft of staring my traumas in the face that I learned the most about myself. One of which was also losing my dad from a very early age. I also take an ssri (started at age 25, not 15), which has really helped with my anxiety. I have cptsd, ocd, adhd... and the meds really help me manage my symptoms. And I couldn't relate to Brooke, who described her med experience as numbing to her emotions. I haven't had that experience. I still cry. I still get angry. I still feel. And yes, I still get anxious from time to time. But it's no longer intolerable, and I can regulate myself so much better.
My view is that there are many drugs out there that really can and do make a positive difference to people's lives, mental health, and will to live. As much as this book is a critique of big pharma, I would hope that it doesn't dissuade people from getting the mental health help they need in terms of seeing a professional therapist/psychiatrist and perhaps taking a certain medication(s) that may actually help.
BUT Brookes' story goes to show that it isn't always positive. And I know she was on a concoction of drugs, and from a very early age, and of course, these things affect people in different ways. And this was her story, not mine, so I'll back down a little bit...
Brooke did have Alan, as a bit of emotional support and he did seem to help Brooke to a certain degree in terms of sitting with her feelings in the moment, but it seemed like an alternate kind of therapy... I wondered how effective it really was in the long term...
The one thing I will say, though, is that the book really did enlight me to the impact that coming off ssri's can have and the withdrawals that can occur. Which is something for me and a lot of others to be catious of. And I guess this was the purpose of the book in the first place.
The book also raises an important issue around doctors giving out medications very flippantly, which are hard to come off of. And the issue of misdiagnosis. I know Brooke is from the States, and their system is different from the UK's medical system, but I am sure it is an issue across the board.
And the writing style, I liked it. I think Brooke is a great writer. She painted many images in my mind of how she was feeling, which allowed me to empathise with her distressing moments. And I particularly liked the last chapters. And the description of her birth and her eyes being able to see the light. 😊