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Somewhere Over the Rainbow, I've Lost My Damn Mind - A Manic's Mood Chart (Paperback)
Loot Price: R397
Discovery Miles 3 970
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Somewhere Over the Rainbow, I've Lost My Damn Mind - A Manic's Mood Chart (Paperback)
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Loot Price R397
Discovery Miles 3 970
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Donate to Against Period Poverty
Total price: R407
Discovery Miles: 4 070
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I figure that if I have to endure the worst parts of bipolar
disorder, like psychosis, I get to laugh as much as possible along
the way. Somewhere Over the Rainbow, I've Lost My Damn Mind: A
Manic's Mood Chart is the story of one Millennial's bipolar life,
with moments ranging from the ridiculous to the terrifying to the
hilarious. Blending pop culture references and cyberspeak with
psychiatric terms, it combines the funny, conversational tone of
Sh*t My Dad Says with a nonlinear narrative structure similar to
that of Manic. The book began as a blog: if you had a delusional
relationship with Britney Spears, wouldn't you brag about it to the
entire world? To create the book, I organized the blog entries like
a mood chart, a therapeutic tool which assigns colors of the
rainbow to states of mind. The entries are divided into three
sections, Depressed, Normal and Elevated, and cover the past three
years: my psych ward getaways, my vision of fighting alongside
Jesus at Armageddon, my attempts to find a woman who accepts that I
sometimes lose my mind. Therapy "sessions" with a fictional
psychiatrist provide my present-day reflections on each entry. (I
had to create my ideal shrink because I tend to fight with the real
ones.) Somewhere Over the Rainbow will be the first humorous memoir
about bipolar by a member of the Millennial Generation-today's
young adults. Because it doesn't follow the usual narrative format,
the reader can flip through at random or take the traditional
cover-to-cover route. My book's humor, pop culture references and
Internet origins will appeal to Millennials, now entering their
twenties and thirties, as well as younger Gen Xers. More than an
account of coming to terms with a mental health condition, it's a
story of being young and feeling lost, dealing with heartbreak and
still finding plenty to laugh about, no matter what happens.
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