This is a story of hope. My book about my personal experience with clinical depression reads like a fast-paced novel, with characters that charm and frustrate. The content is tough, but the story difficult to abandon. My book also relates my search for identity. After leaving the business world to care for small children and aging grandparents, as well as adapting to a culture far different from that of my upbringing, I evaporated into my surroundings, no longer sure of who I was. What was my purpose? What did I want? These questions cratered me, setting in motion my genetic tendency for depression. Most people answer these questions without a tour of the psychiatric ward, but my road was bumpy -- the psychiatric ward was only one of many stops. Each time I speak about my experience, I find people are often one step removed from the devastation of mental illness or even suicide. Stories about mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, spouses, and children all make me wonder: Could we have stopped those deaths? If we are more aware, can we see the signs earlier and save a life? I think we can. In that belief, I offer my story. Proceeds from this book will be donated to programs and research to battle mental illness.
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Product Details
Weight: 386g
Dimensions: 155 x 230mm
Publication Date: 01 Jan 2011
Publisher: Greenleaf Book Group LLC
Publication City/Country: United States
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781626344075
About Julie K. Hersh
Awarded the Mental Health America Ruth Altschuler Community Advocate Prism Award and selected as one of the 2010 Distinguished Women by Northwood University Julie Hersh is an outspoken advocate for mental health. Despite medical advances Julie says too many people die by suicide because they are afraid to seek help. Julie's goal is to provide a living example that mental illness is a manageable disease. Her Struck by Living blog is featured on the Psychology Today website. Julie is also a guest blogger on the Menninger Clinic Say No to Stigma website. After earning her BBA at the University of Notre Dame Hersh worked in high-tech product development and marketing/sales in Silicon Valley. She retired from a lucrative sales management position after the birth of her first child. A long-time member of the Cooper Center Hersh ran her first marathon at age 48. Julie is Board President of the Dallas Children's Theater and active supporter of the Suicide and Crisis Center CONTACT and other non-profit organizations. She lives with her husband and two children in Dallas Texas.