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A memoir of life with bipolar disease
By
Diana Wagman, Los Angeles Times
The
National Institute of Mental Health reports that 5.7 million adult
Americans -- 2.6% of the population -- suffer from bipolar disorder. Researchers
also say that bipolar disorder can shave more than nine years off of
someone's life. And yet, according to the Depression and Bipolar
Alliance, it takes an average of 10 years for an appropriate diagnosis. Cheney
is a remarkable woman with or without her illness. For years she was a
brilliant and accomplished Los Angeles entertainment lawyer with
important clients, a six-figure income and a terrible secret. She
hid her life-threatening depression -- days when she could not even get
out of bed -- as dental problems or a family member's illness. And
her mania, her racing thoughts, self-aggrandizement and boundless
energy actually endeared her to the partners she worked for. She
was more than a workaholic or Type A personality; she was so devoted to
the firm that she hardly slept or ate. If she crashed afterward, it was
to be expected. In her
young adulthood, the doctors diagnosed only the depression and with
Cheney's strict upbringing, depression was just something she needed to
get over. "My
father did not believe in psychiatry. He believed in bootstraps -- as
in pull yourself up by your own bootstraps and get on with your life." And
Cheney tells us her father was everything to her. His opinion was all
that mattered. She is
raped in New Mexico, sent to jail for drug possession and describes in
horrifying detail the aftermath of electroshock therapy. We
move back and forth through time and treatments at lightning speed. As
Cheney says in her preface, "I wanted this book to mirror the disease,
to give the reader a visceral experience. That's why I've chosen to
tell my life story episodically, rather than in any chronological
order." The
book becomes a list of sometimes terrifying, sometimes exultant events.
It fuels our prurient interest, but we are not allowed to get in deep
enough to empathize with Cheney, only to stand back and marvel and
admire. Cheney
has decided to be a writer and tell us this story. If that means she
must tell us her darkest moments, the inappropriate men, the
self-medicating, the insane behavior, then she will, but everything she
describes is blamed on the disease. Her
father is invoked time after time as the center of her existence and
her childhood, but we are not allowed to see him. They have one scene
together where he behaves callously and inappropriately. Her mother is
almost never mentioned. Toward
the end of the book Cheney writes about her first bout of depression as
a teenager, how long it lasted, how much and what she ate, but not how
it changed her. We
never learn what her friends at school thought of her absence, or even
her parents' reaction when they found her eating raw pasta by the
handful. Where
were these people in the book? A scene with one of them could have told
us so much about the real Cheney, the one they obviously know is there. But
the rest she tells us. She says she has lapses in memory due to drugs
and the electroshock therapies, but we do not get to experience these
gaps. It is
as if she will let us in so far, but no further. Instead of helping us
to understand her, the spontaneous and chaotic style of the book
appears incredibly rigid and controlled. "Manic:
A Memoir"
chronicles Cheney's decades-long struggle to come to terms with and
manage her bipolar disorder. ~ ~ ~ Related
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