The Complications, Emmett Rensin
The Complications, Emmett Rensin
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The Complications
On Going Insane in America

Author: Emmett Rensin

Narrator: James Gloucester

Unabridged: 12 hr 56 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: HarperAudio

Published: 04/23/2024


Synopsis

An unflinching, rare account of living with severe mental illness that is also a bold commentary on how we misunderstand this often debilitating disease.The Complications is an intimate portrait of what it’s like to live with schizoaffective disorder of the bipolar type as well as a biting, revelatory critique of America’s mental health culture. Emmett Rensin has written and edited articles for major national media outlets, and taught writing and literature at prestigious schools. But he has also lost jobs and friends, been hospitalized and institutionalized, and cycled through a daunting combination of medications. With scorching honesty, he reflects on his messy, fragile attempt to live his life, his periods of grace, and his near misses with disaster and death.Going beyond the usual peans against “stigma” and for “understanding”, Rensin confronts the dysfunction in current mental health narratives, contrasting what he calls mental illness “high culture”—in which we affirm the prevalence of anxiety and encourage regular therapy, insisting that the “mentally ill” aren’t dangerous or even weird—with even progressive society’s inability to contend with people with more severe forms of mental illness: those people we pass on the street talking to themselves, those caught in a loop between hospitals and prisons, or even those who we cannot tolerate in our own schools, offices, and lives, including himself. With raw honesty, Rensin invites us into every aspect of his life, from what it’s like see four different psychiatrists in one year and the nature of psychotic breaks to a harrowing diary that logs exactly what happens when he stops taking his medication and the unexpected kinship he discovers with an incarcerated spree killer with schizophrenia. Going beyond pure memoir, he reflects on the uncertain “science” of diagnosis, the nature of art about and by the insane, political activism, and the history of madness, from the asylum to the academy. A compelling, often devastating, blend of memoir, cultural commentary, and history, The Complications elevates the conversation around mental illness and challenges us to reexamine what we think we know about what is to go insane.

About Emmett Rensin

Emmett Rensin is a writer. His previous work has appeared in The Atlantic, New Republic, Los Angeles Times, and other major publications.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Robert on June 10, 2024

Just finished this excellent book by Emmett Rensin after I heard him on the BaR pod. He really articulates the real lived experience of a person suffering from mental illness in this book like the many mad memoirs of past but with the understanding of both a person suffering from a condition and a j......more

Goodreads review by David on September 11, 2024

Puts the insidious onset of a psychotic episode on display really well. It’s a really difficult concept to convey, and there is a lot of damage being done to the brain during this period, and unfortunately, it’s very difficult to intervene because it’s very difficult to detect the onset of psychosis......more

Goodreads review by Kassandra on October 13, 2024

Emmett Rensin has the most beautiful ability to illustrate and put into words topics that are so often ignored or filled with ignorance. Seriously worth the read.......more

Goodreads review by Andy on July 09, 2024

Fascinating, complicated, sad, true. Not preachy but honest depiction on one person’s struggle with insanity - even the description of what constitutes insanity is complicated. The chapter on Mullin seems a little out of place but otherwise a good read.......more

Goodreads review by John on July 18, 2024

The introduction written by someone else had me very nervous for the rest of the book, but actually Emmett's writing itself is much more engaging than the person who provided the into (sorry). Having said that, I still found the writing a bit tough at times -but that is more because I don't persona......more