A collection of individual stories that could alter perception of addiction, mental health, and treatment in the U.S.
Kennedy, a mental health advocate and former member of Congress, and journalist Fried, co-authors of A Common Struggle, model their latest collaboration on the classic Profiles in Courage, written by Kennedy's uncle, John F. Kennedy. The authors seek to amplify the experiences of a dozen individuals who struggle with mental illness and/or addiction. Kennedy and Fried present a wide array of stories that are compelling, heartbreaking, and inspiring, including those of a bipolar Hollywood actor and crack addict turned addiction counselor. One of the most interesting aspects of the book is Kennedy's adroit faculty for interviewing. Likely borne of empathy and knowledge from personal and familial experiences and difficulties with addiction and mental illness to which he often refers in the text, Kennedy's intelligent questions elicit poignant and blunt answers from his subjects. Their testimonies illuminate all aspects of their addictions and diseases, successes and failures, in addition to those of medical professionals and family and friends. His experience in crafting public policy and his knowledge about the significant deficiencies of mental health care add unique perspective. Readers will gain a better understanding and perhaps become less dismissive, disdainful, or fearful of family members, patients, clients, and strangers who are in the clutches of addiction and mental illness and need help. “We often quote the statistic that…at least a quarter of all Americans struggle with mental illness, substance use disorder, or both,” writes Kennedy. “And while these are still sometimes viewed as two separate illnesses—because two distinct worlds developed to address them—I can tell you as someone who has them both that they are best understood and treated together as one complex continuum of diseases of the brain and mind.”
An insightful, compelling book.