The magic daughter : a memoir of living with multiple personality disorder / Jane Phillips.

Jane Phillips began writing The Magic Daughter, a memoir of her experiences with Multiple Personality Disorder, as a suicide note. She wanted to leave behind an account of her existence with a fragmented mind: the daily struggle to maintain consensus among a variety of selves; the awkwardness of enc...

Whakaahuatanga katoa

I tiakina i:
Ngā taipitopito rārangi puna kōrero
Kaituhi matua: Phillips, Jane (Author)
Hōputu: iPukapuka
Reo:English
I whakaputaina: New York, N.Y. : Viking, 1995.
Ngā marau:
Urunga tuihono:Counseling and Psychotherapy Transcripts, Client Narratives, and Reference Works
Whakaahuatanga
Whakarāpopototanga:Jane Phillips began writing The Magic Daughter, a memoir of her experiences with Multiple Personality Disorder, as a suicide note. She wanted to leave behind an account of her existence with a fragmented mind: the daily struggle to maintain consensus among a variety of selves; the awkwardness of encountering people who seemed to have "met" her but of whom she had no memory; the constant fatigue brought on by having to complete tasks several times in order to satisfy her various selves that a job is done; and the fear that somehow she will blow her cover and appear as something other than the college professor that she is. Instead of dying, Jane Phillips became fascinated with the task she had set herself. Instead of dying, she wrote this exquisitely crafted account of her life as a multiple and her journey toward being "just-one." In The Magic Daughter, she describes the day-to-day experience of living with this disorder as well as her work with a remarkable therapist over the course of nearly a decade, trying to decode the workings of her mind and the reality of her past. Together, they uncover the memories of violence, abuse, and manipulation by her brothers and parents, who saw her as the long-awaited "magic daughter" who could save this dysfunctional family. She learns to sleep through the night without waking in terror as memory after memory surfaces; she teaches herself to differentiate between remembered pain and current illness so she can explain her condition to a doctor before her other selves can take over and her symptoms disappear; and she makes the astonishing discovery that even in her mid-thirties, she has no understanding of what being a woman really means. She uncovers The Kids, JJ, and numerous other selves who protected the young and adult Jane, and, with help of her therapist, she achieves a newly dawned sense of gender, chronology, and unity.
Whakaahuatanga ōkiko:1 online resource (xv, 238 pages)
Hōputu:Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Ngā tono
Tāpaetia he tono taumata taitara Tonoa tēnei tūemi AUT kia taea ai te kohi ina tae koe ki te whare pukapuka.
Interlibrary Loan With Interlibrary Loan you can request the item from another library. It's a free service.