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Margaret Hawkins - After Schizophrenia: The Story of How My Sister Got Help, Got Hope, and Got on with Life after 30 Years in Her Room

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Margaret Hawkins After Schizophrenia: The Story of How My Sister Got Help, Got Hope, and Got on with Life after 30 Years in Her Room
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After Schizophrenia: The Story of How My Sister Got Help, Got Hope, and Got on with Life after 30 Years in Her Room: summary, description and annotation

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Schizophrenia affects more than 3 million American adults. Despite being classified as a severe mental illness, a brain disease that can be treated, it remains misunderstood. Schizophrenia still carries a stigma that too often devastates and silences families.

For 30 years, Margaret Hawkins sister Barb lived cloistered in her family home in suburban Chicago, a prisoner of undiagnosed schizophrenia. Hearing voices and paralyzed with fear, she was never evaluated, never treated, and refused to leave the house.

After Schizophrenia is the story of Barbs descent into severe mental illness and the healing that has come only in recent years: after her parents death when Margaret became her guardian. With uncanny grace and humor, Margaret chronicles her familys struggle with Barbs mental illness, the love that carried them through, and the virtual army of healthcare angels willing to come to Barbs aid. This is an extraordinary story of severe mental illness and the healing that is possible with prompt diagnosis, good drugs, good care, and a fierce belief in the power to get well.

Margaret Hawkins: author's other books


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Praise for AFTER SCHIZOPHRENIA

Picture 1

This is an unflinching account of a family's struggle to care for a schizophrenic adult child, Barb, who languished for 30 years as a homebound invalid. Once her parents died the author and her brother were tenacious and determined to try to find help and improve the state of their now 63-year-old sister's life. It is a heartwarming story of a family's struggle to come to terms with severe mental illness and find hope and love on the other side. What it shows us, once again, is that most of what we think we know about mental illness is just plain wrong.

MARK VONNEGUT, MD, author of The Eden Express and Just Like Someone Without Mental Illness Only More So

Picture 2

I began After Schizophrenia wondering if I had the stamina for a book I knew would be fraught with reminders of my own difficult life with my mentally ill sister. But it turned out to be a beautifully crafted story of immense compassion and subtle humor that held me in thrall from the first page to the last. In countless ways, Margaret Hawkins tailored her own life to suit the needs of her family, especially her beloved, charismatic older sister, but one has to read between the lines to grasp the scope of her sacrifices and her devotion. She tells her story with great tenderness, both for her parents who, like most parents, made grave mistakes and for her sister, Barb, who changed from a progressive, funny, sophisticated role model to a shy and shadowy woman haunted by voices she could not control. Because of Margaret's refusal to give up on her, Barb at last reemerges. I loved this generous memoir, a moving testament to optimism and determination.

MARGARET MOORMAN, author of My Sister's Keeper

Picture 3

In this book, Margaret Hawkins wrenchingly depicts a family crippled by dysfunction and the stigma of mental illness. The loss of Barb to years of psychosis is so sad, but her recovery is inspiring and instructional. What we see so vividly through these pages is that mental illness is treatable, the biggest obstacle being fear and ignorance.

RICHARD K. BAER, MD, author of Switching Time

Picture 4

After Schizophrenia is an honest and engaging portrayal of the often sudden, always life-changing, onset of mental illnessboth for the person who experiences it and the family and friends who love her. Lives that seem so promising and so hopeful can be forever changed by mental illness, but After Schizophrenia shows us that the change isn't necessarily forever and that there is so much reason to hope. Readers are brought into this family's world through the eyes of a sibling, a perspective that is seldom written about but immensely important, and are shown how life can be turned upside-down and then brought right back to being right-side up by mental illness, empowerment, and the human spirit.

ALISON K. MALMON, Founder and Executive Director, Active Minds, Inc.

Picture 5

A moving yet down-to-earth portrayal of what's it like to live with a serious mental illness. Hawkins affirms the hope of recovery for millions of others like Barb.

LINDA ROSENBERG, MSW, President and CEO, National Council for Community Behavioral Healthcare

Picture 6

A beautiful tribute to an older sister who hears voices, from the elegant pen of a younger one who never gave up. The steady care on display here is what real love is all about. Their rare story should inspire America's 3 million affected families to keep the faith for the least of our brethren.

PATRICK TRACEY, author of Stalking Irish Madness: Searching for the Roots of My Family's Schizophrenia

This edition first published in 2011 by Conari Press an imprint of Red - photo 7

This edition first published in 2011 by Conari Press, an imprint of Red Wheel/Weiser, LLC

With offices at:

665 Third Street, Suite 400

San Francisco, CA 94107

www.redwheelweiser.com

Copyright 2010, 2011 by Margaret Hawkins.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from Red Wheel/Weiser, LLC. Reviewers may quote brief passages.

Originally published in 2010 as How We Got Barb Back by Red Wheel Weiser,

ISBN: 978-1-57324-477-0.

ISBN: 978-1-57324-535-7

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data available upon request

Cover design by Jim Warner

Printed in the United States of America

M

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information SciencesPermanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials Z39.48-1992 (R1997).

Contents

For my sister, Barbara

Picture 8

And in loving memory of my parents,

Barbara Faxon Hawkins and Thomas Rhodes Hawkins

What we do not make conscious emerges later as fate.

CARL JUNG

Foreword

When the galley proofs for this book first arrived, with a request to write a foreword, I had just been fired as my own twin sister's guardian, conservator, and hospital contact person.

People often think I became a psychiatrist to try to help my sister, but the truth is I became a psychiatrist in spite of her. Unlike Barb Hawkins, whom you're about to meet, Pamela has spent decades in and out of hospitals because of schizophrenia. For many years there was no predicting when an emergency call about her would jolt me out of bed. Never as her doctor, you understand, just as next of kin. Recently she's been in-patient for weeks. Last night, I refused to sign her out AMA (Against Medical Advice), and now I'm persona non grata? I don't know whether to be angry or ecstatic.

As it turns out however, the timing is perfect. Without a hospital visit to Pammy looming, I have hours to spend reading this manuscript with the intriguing title, After Schizophrenia, comfortably ensconced on the sofa.

The pages slip quickly by as I welcome Margaret and Barbara and the whole of the Hawkins clan into my home and I almost finish the memoir in one sitting. I've never met Margaret, and yet I feel I know her like a sister is what I say the first time we talk a few days later. Nevertheless, as I read, the puzzling words home invasion keep popping into my head. The words usually refer to something violent, like breaking and entering. Then I realize--of course, the Hawkins home and family have been invaded by schizophrenia, just as it invaded my own home years ago, as it has invaded homes for millennia, silently unraveling lives and destroying dreams.

Worse, the stigma of schizophrenia marks entire families as modern-day lepers, alienating many patients and caretakers from friends, family and community. Readers of my own book (and Pammy's) Divided Minds may remember what stigma did in the early years to the Spiro family. In Ms. Hawkins's book the stigma of schizophrenia is so powerful that Barbara's father has to die before she can get help. To understand what both the Hawkinses and my family experienced years ago, you have to keep in mind that forty years ago many people, even psychiatrists, didn't think of schizophrenia as a bona fide physical brain illness.

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