quinn I love what you wrote about medical professionals.
Aside from being so well-put and so true, it relates to my own life, weirdly, for yours is the best explanation of why I did not become a surgeon as I often dreamed I would, as a kid. But it turns out I am far too much of a mom!! I told my husband I would really really love to be a surgeon, but only if I knew every patient would be completely cured! Ha ha.
As for Kate Gompert: when I first read this book in 2001, I had the absolute conviction that the sections dealing with addiction and with depression were the author's lived experiences. I didn't know a thing about Wallace at that time, having picked the book up at a thrift shop (vaguely remembering that there had been some kind of a fuss about it when it came out.) Having learned so much about him since then, I trust that conviction a little less, maybe. He had been around so many addicts and so many depressives for so long, and also he was such a skilled writer, that I think he might have taken a certain pleasure in transcending his own demons by cutting them all up, making pastiches of them, mixing them in with other people's demons. Like a way of gaining the upper hand.
Nobody can say how long he would have stayed functional on the meds he took for so many years, had he not decided to change them. If you want to know more about how those meds affected him, read this story he wrote in 1984.
There's something weirdly seductive about that idea, that we know when something is "real" and when it is "made up." -- ??
_________________ ------------------------ The dorks are saving the nation, and this book proves it.
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