I forgot to remember : a memoir of amnesia / Su Meck with Daniel de Visé.
By: Meck, Su [author.].
Contributor(s): De Visé, Daniel [author.].
New York, NY : Simon & Schuster, ©2014Edition: First Simon & Schuster hardcover edition.Description: 280 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm.ISBN: 9781451685817 (hardback).Subject(s): Meck, Su -- Mental health | Amnesia -- Patients -- Biography | Brain -- Concussion -- Complications | BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Personal Memoirs | BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Women | MEDICAL / NeurologyGenre/Form: Print books.Summary: "Just twenty-two years old, Su Meck was already married and the mother of two children in 1988 when a ceiling fan in the kitchen of her home fell from its mounting and struck her in the head. She survived the life-threatening swelling in her brain that resulted from the accident, but when she regained consciousness in the hospital the next day, she didn't know her own name. She didn't recognize a single family member or friend, she couldn't read or write or brush her teeth or use a fork--and she didn't have even a scrap of memory from her life up to that point. The fiercely independent and outspoken young woman she had been vanished completely. Most patients who suffer amnesia as a result of a head injury eventually regain their memories, but Su never did. After three weeks in the hospital she was sent back out into a world about which she knew nothing: What did it mean to be someone's wife? To be a mother? How did everyone around her seem to know what they were supposed to do or say at any given moment? Adrift in the chaos of mental data that most of us think of as everyday life, Su became an adept mimic, fashioning a self and a life out of careful observation and ironclad routine. She had no dreams for herself, no plans outside the ever-burgeoning daily to-do list of a stay-at-home mom. The Meck family left Texas to start over in Maryland, and told almost no one in their new life about Su's accident. Nearly twenty years would pass before Su understood the full extent of the losses she and her family suffered as a result of her injury. As a series of personally devastating events shattered the "normal" life she had worked so hard to build, Su realized that she would have to grow up all over again, and finally take control of the strange second life she had awoken into"--Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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On Shelf | RC394.A5 M43 2014 (Browse shelf) | Available | AU0000000003186 |
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RC392 .N48 2013 The neuropsychiatry of headache / | RC392 .S33 1999 Migraine / | RC394.A5 D57 2016 Patient H.M. : a story of memory, madness and family secrets / | RC394.A5 M43 2014 I forgot to remember : a memoir of amnesia / | RC394 .A85 2017 Could it be adult ADHD? : a clinician's guide to recognition, assessment, and treatment / | RC394.A85 A343 2011 ADHD in adults : characterization, diagnosis, and treatment / | RC394 .A85 A87 2017 Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder : adult outcome and its predictors / |
"Simon & Schuster nonfiction original hardcover."
Includes bibliographical references and index.
"Just twenty-two years old, Su Meck was already married and the mother of two children in 1988 when a ceiling fan in the kitchen of her home fell from its mounting and struck her in the head. She survived the life-threatening swelling in her brain that resulted from the accident, but when she regained consciousness in the hospital the next day, she didn't know her own name. She didn't recognize a single family member or friend, she couldn't read or write or brush her teeth or use a fork--and she didn't have even a scrap of memory from her life up to that point. The fiercely independent and outspoken young woman she had been vanished completely. Most patients who suffer amnesia as a result of a head injury eventually regain their memories, but Su never did. After three weeks in the hospital she was sent back out into a world about which she knew nothing: What did it mean to be someone's wife? To be a mother? How did everyone around her seem to know what they were supposed to do or say at any given moment? Adrift in the chaos of mental data that most of us think of as everyday life, Su became an adept mimic, fashioning a self and a life out of careful observation and ironclad routine. She had no dreams for herself, no plans outside the ever-burgeoning daily to-do list of a stay-at-home mom. The Meck family left Texas to start over in Maryland, and told almost no one in their new life about Su's accident. Nearly twenty years would pass before Su understood the full extent of the losses she and her family suffered as a result of her injury. As a series of personally devastating events shattered the "normal" life she had worked so hard to build, Su realized that she would have to grow up all over again, and finally take control of the strange second life she had awoken into"--