I know the author, Louise Gillett, from her blog Schizophrenia at the School Gate. I'm delighted to have a chance to review her book. Louise is part of the growing number of people who have moved beyond their schizophrenia diagnosis and are committed to encouraging other people to do the same. Her book is a sparingly told and well-written memoir that presents plausible reasons for her schizophrenic breakdown. Unsurprisingly, the reasons are not genetic and are not about bad brain chemistry. People like the author, who consider themselves fully recovered, tend to see the home environment as the reason for their troubles. Home environments are traumatic to one degree or another, but especially for sensitive people.
Holistic explanations for schizophrenia often say that there are two traumas ¯ one pre-birth or in early childhood and the second one in the teen years that pushes the person into psychosis. I personally believe that the person who develops psychosis is more sensitive and intuitive than the rest of the family right from the start.
So, it is unsurprising for me to read that the author was a dreamy, inward-focused child well before the final chain of events that pushed her into a hospital and a medical diagnosis. Take what happened to her at school when she was about the age of ten. (The age of ten, according to shamanic teachings, is when the assemblage point begins to split and the child reverts more and more into fantasy.) Louise meets a new teacher and his wife in the stairway of her school. When she mentions this encounter to the school principal, she learns that the school has not hired a new teacher. According to Assemblage Point teachings, a later traumatic event in the teenage years will push the person into schizophrenia.
Reversal of fortune and family breakdown is one such traumatic event. The author and her siblings went from living in a large house in England, expensive boarding schools and first class air tickets to far-flung destinations, to suddenly one day flat broke and living in a shop over a store.
This book offers many interesting insights as to why psychotic breaks happen. It's a refreshing change from the many memoirs on schizophrenia that see schizophrenia solely through the lens of a biochemical disease.