Summary:
When Rachel Aviv, the author of Strangers to Ourselves,
was six years old, she simply stopped eating.
She said she got the idea from the Yom Kippur fast. She was promptly checked into a psychiatric
hospital where she became one of the youngest-ever patients to be given the
diagnosis of anorexia. Through
associating with older, more seasoned anorexic girls she became a sort of
“anorexic-in-training” (p.13). Fortunately, after a few months she snapped out of
it, and was discharged. She never suffered
from the same symptoms again.
As an adult, Aviv began to think about what had happened to
her. The only remnant of her experience
was a diary entry from age 8: “I had a diseas called anexexia” (p.231). Had she even had the disorder, or had the
diagnosis been a mistake? Why had she
not gone on to have “an anorexic ‘career’” (ibid.), while one of the girls who
had mentored her ultimately died of anorexia-related causes? In
order to answer these questions for herself, Aviv meets with the therapists who
treated her more than thirty years ago as well as with the family of her deceased
copatient.
As a result of Aviv’s introspection, she becomes intrigued
by people whose psychiatric diagnoses do not fully capture the complexities of
their situation. Strangers to
Ourselves presents detailed case histories of several such individuals. Bapu is an Indian woman whose visions have
caused her to be diagnosed with schizophrenia.
Are they delusions, or is she a mystic?
Naomi is a socially disadvantaged black woman who has struggled
unsuccessfully to get ahead. During a
manic episode, she jumps into a river with her young twins, one of whom dies. Her
claim that “white people are out to get me” (p. 146) is ignored because her
doctors insist that “delusions couldn’t on some level make sense” (p. 150). Yet
another woman, Laura, bounces from diagnosis to diagnosis, and sleeps fourteen
hours a day because of all the medication she is on. She becomes one of these people who no longer
even know if their lack of functioning is “due to their underlying disorder
[or] the heavy medications they’d taken for it” (p. 203).
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