JEFF BAENEN
MINNEAPOLIS – Marya Hornbacher remembers her “endless nights” as a child as young as 4, when she says she first began to show symptoms of bipolar disorder.
“Bam! At 5, 6 o’clock I’m off, I’m ready to roll. And the world is shutting down around me and I’m getting more and more frantic because nobody wants to talk,” Hornbacher recalls with a laugh, “and nobody else wants to go to the moon that afternoon and nobody else wants to go ice skating in the woods, you know, at 4 a.m.”
She would spin out of control, racing around the house until her mother discovered that a late-night bath would calm her. Finally, she says, her parents told her she could do anything she wanted at night, “but you cannot come out of your room and talk to us, because we’re going to bed.”
Hornbacher, now 34, says those early episodes were the start of a lifelong cycle of mania that culminated in repeated hospitalizations, electroshock treatments and eventually daily medication that stabilizes her mood.
After chronicling her battle with eating disorders in her 1998 memoir “Wasted,” Hornbacher tackles her alternating bouts of euphoria and depression in a new book, “Madness: A Bipolar Life.” Reviews have been positive, with USA Today saying that as Hornbacher “whips around this roller-coaster ride, her unflinching style keeps us seated firmly beside her.”
Writing in a straightforward narrative, Hornbacher fills “Madness” with grim details, such as the time in 1994 she slashed open her left arm while cutting herself as a 20-year-old. She recounts spending sprees, failed romances and her haziness after electroconvulsive therapy. But she also writes with humor about stuffing a brocade bedspread into a too-small washer during a cleaning frenzy.
Dressed stylishly with her hair dyed red and cut short, Hornbacher appeared upbeat during an interview at the comfortable house she shares with her second husband, Jeff Miller. Thanks to her medication – she takes around 26 pills a day – and basic daily tasks, Hornbacher is at equilibrium “much of the time.”
But her impulses – such as to suddenly travel a great distance or go shopping – can trigger a manic episode.
Bipolar disorder, formerly known as manic depression, affects as many as 5.8 million American adults each year, or 2.6 percent of the U.S. population age 18 and older, with 25 the median age of onset, according to the National Institute of Mental Health. Hornbacher writes that she was diagnosed with bipolar in 1997 and is bipolar I, spending more of her time manic before going into an occasional “vicious” depression, than the milder bipolar II.
A recovering alcoholic who has been sober for years, Hornbacher writes that despite her bipolar diagnosis, she would continue to drink, which negated the effects of her medication.
Patients with bipolar have a high rate of substance abuse and may turn to alcohol or drugs for self-medication, according to Dr. Husseini Manji, head of the Mood and Anxiety Disorders program at the NIMH.
Hornbacher says she has about four episodes a year and was last hospitalized last summer. She says she occasionally has grandiose delusions – “I did think I was a Supreme Court justice at one time” – and that reminding herself of her accomplishments doesn’t help.
“Telling myself what I’ve done, how well I’ve done, when I’m manic, and saying, ‘Well, it is enough to just be a best-selling author, you don’t need to be queen.’ It’s not that I feel a desire to be queen. It’s that one day, I think I’m queen,” Hornbacher said.
Hornbacher accepts that she eventually will be hospitalized again and says there is no stigma to it.
“Were I to put myself on … one of those online dating things, I would not include in my profile that I’m regularly hospitalized for psychosis,” she said. “But I do know that when I get really bad, there is a place for me to go where I will feel better.” Madness: A Bipolar Life
By Marya Hornbacher
Houghton Mifflin, 320 pages, $25
Sunday, June 29, 2008
Madness’ author recalls mental struggle -
Associated Press
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