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Kay Redfield Jamison - An Unquiet Mind

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Kay Redfield Jamison An Unquiet Mind
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An Unquiet Mind: summary, description and annotation

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WITH A NEW PREFACE BY THE AUTHOR In her bestselling classic, An Unquiet Mind, Kay Redfield Jamison changed the way we think about moods and madness. Dr. Jamison is one of the foremost authorities on manic-depressive (bipolar) illness; she has also experienced it firsthand. For even while she was pursuing her career in academic medicine, Jamison found herself succumbing to the same exhilarating highs and catastrophic depressions that afflicted many of her patients, as her disorder launched her into ruinous spending sprees, episodes of violence, and an attempted suicide. Here Jamison examines bipolar illness from the dual perspectives of the healer and the healed, revealing both its terrors and the cruel allure that at times prompted her to resist taking medication. An Unquiet Mind is a memoir of enormous candor, vividness, and wisdoma deeply powerful book that has both transformed and saved lives.From the Trade Paperback edition.AnnotationFirst-person account of manic-depression.

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ACCLAIM FOR Kay Redfield Jamisons
AN UNQUIET MIND

Written with poetic and moving sensitivity a rare and insightful view of mental illness from inside the mind of a trained specialist.

Time

Enlightening eloquent and profound.

San Francisco Chronicle

A riveting portrayal of a courageous brain alternating between exhilarating highs and numbing lows.

James D. Watson, Nobel laureate and author of The Double Helix

In a most intimate and powerful telling, Jamison weaves the personal and professional threads of her life together. [She] brings us inside the disease and helps us understand manic depression. What comes through is a remarkably whole person with the grit to defeat her disease.

Cleveland Plain Dealer

A riveting read. I devoured it at a single sitting and found the book almost as compelling on a second read. An Unquiet Mind may well become a classic. Jamison sets an example of courage.

Howard Gardner, Nature

Stunning. I have never read a more exquisite (in both a literary and medical sense) autobiography. This is an important, wonderful book.

Jackson Clarion Ledger

Piercingly honest. Jamisons literary coming-out is a mark of courage.

People

Brave, insightful, richly textured and chillingly authentic.

Boston Globe

Extraordinary. An Unquiet Mind must be read.

The New England Journal of Medicine

A beautiful, funny, original book. Powerfully written, it is a wonderful and important account of mercurial moods and madness. I absolutely love this book.

Pat Conroy, author of The Prince of Tides

A landmark. The combination of the intensity of her personal life and the intellectual rigor of her professional experience make the book unique. A vibrant and engaging account of the life, love, and experience of a woman, a therapist, an academic, and a patient.

The British Medical Journal

Affecting, honest, touching fluid, felt and often lyrical.

Will Self, The Observer (London)

Quite astonishing cuts through the dead jargon and detached observations of psychiatric theory and practice to create a fiery, passionate, authentic account of the devastation and exaltation, the blindness and illumination of the psychotic experience.

The Sunday Times (London)

Rises to the poetic and has a mystical touch a courageous and fascinating book, a moving account of the life of a remarkable woman.

The Daily Telegraph (London)

Fast-paced, startingly honest and frequently lyrical [Jamison has] a novelists openness of phrase and talent for bringing character alive.

Scotland on Sunday

Superbly written. A compelling work of literature.

Independent on Sunday (London)

Kay Redfield Jamison
AN UNQUIET MIND

Kay Redfield Jamison is Professor of Psychiatry at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. She is the author of Touched with Fire: Manic-Depressive Illness and the Artistic Temperament, Night Falls Fast: Understanding Suicide, Exuberance: The Passion for Life , and coauthor of the standard medical text on manic-depressive illness, chosen in 1990 as the Most Outstanding Book in Biomedical Sciences by the Association of American Publishers. The recipient of numerous national and international scientific awards, Dr. Jamison was a member of the first National Advisory Council for Human Genome Research, as well as the clinical director for the Dana Consortium on the Genetic Basis of Manic-Depressive Illness. She lives in Washington, D.C.

FIRST VINTAGE BOOKS EDITION OCTOBER 1996 Copyright 1995 by Kay Redfield - photo 1

FIRST VINTAGE BOOKS EDITION OCTOBER 1996 Copyright 1995 by Kay Redfield - photo 2

FIRST VINTAGE BOOKS EDITION, OCTOBER 1996

Copyright 1995 by Kay Redfield Jamison

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Vintage Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. Originally published in hardcover by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., New York, in 1995.

Owing to limitations of space, acknowledgments for permission to reprint previously published material may be found on .

The Library of Congress has cataloged the Knopf edition as follows:
Jamison, Kay R.
An unquiet mind / Kay Redfield Jamison. 1st ed.
p. cm.
eISBN: 978-0-307-49848-9
1. Jamison, Kay R.Mental health. 2. Manic-depressive psychosesPatientsUnited StatesBiography. 3. Women college teachersUnited StatesBiography. I. Title.
RC516.J363 1995
616.8950092dc20
[B] 95-14273

Random House Web address: http://www.randomhouse.com/

v3.1_r1

For my mother ,
Dell Temple Jamison Who gave me life not
once, but countless times
I doubt sometimes whether
a quiet & unagitated life
would have suited meyet I
sometimes long for it . BYRON

Contents

Prologue W hen its two oclock in the morning and youre manic even the - photo 3

Prologue

W hen its two oclock in the morning and youre manic even the UCLA Medical - photo 4

W hen its two oclock in the morning, and youre manic, even the UCLA Medical Center has a certain appeal. The hospitalordinarily a cold clotting of uninteresting buildingsbecame for me, that fall morning not quite twenty years ago, a focus of my finely wired, exquisitely alert nervous system. With vibrissae twinging, antennae perked, eyes fast-forwarding and fly faceted, I took in everything around me. I was on the run. Not just on the run but fast and furious on the run, darting back and forth across the hospital parking lot trying to use up a boundless, restless, manic energy. I was running fast, but slowly going mad .

The man I was with, a colleague from the medical school, had stopped running an hour earlier and was, he said impatiently, exhausted. This, to a saner mind, would not have been surprising: the usual distinction between day and night had long since disappeared for the two of us, and the endless hours of scotch, brawling, and fallings about in laughter had taken an obvious, if not final, toll. We should have been sleeping or working, publishing not perishing, reading journals, writing in charts, or drawing tedious scientific graphs that no one would read .

Suddenly a police car pulled up. Even in my less-than-totally-lucid state of mind I could see that the officer had his hand on his gun as he got out of the car. What in the hell are you doing running around the parking lot at this hour? he asked. A not unreasonable question. My few remaining islets of judgment reached out to one another and linked up long enough to conclude that this particular situation was going to be hard to explain. My colleague, fortunately, was thinking far better than I was and managed to reach down into some deeply intuitive part of his own and the worlds collective unconscious and said, Were both on the faculty in the psychiatry department. The policeman looked at us, smiled, went back to his squad car, and drove away .

Being professors of psychiatry explained everything .

W ithin a month of signing my appointment papers to become an assistant professor of psychiatry at the University of California, Los Angeles, I was well on my way to madness; it was 1974, and I was twenty-eight years old. Within three months I was manic beyond recognition and just beginning a long, costly personal war against a medication that I would, in a few years time, be strongly encouraging others to take. My illness, and my struggles against the drug that ultimately saved my life and restored my sanity, had been years in the making.

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