BOOK COVER
BOOK DETAILS
Pub Date: May 1, 2024
Genre: Memoir/Inspiration
Publisher: Bitachon Press
Page Count: 296
Format: Paperback, eBook
ISBN: 979-8-9900275-0-3, 979-8-9900275-1-0
Price: $17.95
Sunday, May 19, 1:00 pm PDT, at Book Passage, Corte Madera, California
ABOUT THE BOOK
When a sudden onset of manic episodes lands her in a psychiatric ward, what is an established, respected psychotherapist to do?
Marcia Naomi Berger, single and twenty-nine, has her first psychiatric hospitalization and then two more in the next year and a half. A series of close friends and mentors stand by her through challenges with abusive colleagues, conflicted relationships with men, estrangement from her mother, and confusion about what truly matters.
Diagnosed with bipolar disorder, after trying several medications, the answer comes in the form of lithium. Under her doctor’s guidance, she excels at a new job in San Francisco General Hospital’s psychiatric ward. A new patient there recognizes her from their time as patients in another psych ward.
During each manic episode, Berger has a delusion that she is about to marry someone—her therapist, an ex-boyfriend, or a current one. Her maternal grandmother, Yetta, a poor Yiddish-speaking immigrant, was abandoned by her husband when she was pregnant with Mollie, Berger’s mother, in 1913. Yetta spent the rest of her life in a long-term care psychiatric facility. Mollie grew up in an orphanage. She was devastated when Berger’s father divorced her.
The Bipolar Therapist shares Berger’s mental illness story, her conflict about marrying, and her complex relationship with her mother. It is a story of resilience, perseverance, drive, and courage.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Marcia Naomi Berger (née Fisch), MSW, LCSW, is a psychotherapist in San Rafael, California, and the author of Marriage Meetings for Lasting Love: 30 Minutes a Week to the Relationship You’ve Always Wanted and Marriage Minded: An A to Z Dating Guide for Lasting Love. When employed by the city and county of San Francisco, Berger held senior-level positions in child welfare, alcoholism treatment, and psychiatry.
Berger served as a lecturer on the clinical faculty at the University of California School of Medicine and as executive director of Jewish Family and Children’s Services of the East Bay. She lives with her husband, David Berger, in Marin County, California.
TALKING POINTS
- The Stigma of Mental Illness/Why People Don’t Talk About Their Mental Illness
- How to Relate to a Mentally Ill Family Member
- How Some People Recover from a Severe Mental Illness
- Why Many Mentally Ill People Stop Taking Their Medicine
- Can a Therapist with a Mental Illness Really Help People?
PRAISE
“This memoir by Marcia Naomi Berger was nothing like I expected it to be. IT WAS SO MUCH BETTER. I tend to be hesitant with memoirs, because they don’t tend to draw my interest other than the conclusion up to where their life is at the end of the book, but from beginning to end, I felt like I NEEDED to know more about Marcia. To hear personalized history of how handling mental health, especially bipolar, compared to the practices now, was so beautifully worded. As someone with Bipolar ii I often spend time wondering what life would have been like if I didn’t have the resources before. This book is beautifully written, and feels like a best friend is sitting and telling you a story. Couldn’t recommend enough.”
–Nicki C., 5 out of 5 stars
“The Bipolar Therapist takes some of the mystery out of bipolar disorder. Many people fear or are uncomfortable around mentally ill people when they act differently from the norm. By describing her times of madness and her resulting insights, Berger enhances understanding and helps decrease the shame that people with similar challenges often experience. This memoir takes on a serious topic, seasoning it with excitement, humor, and hope.”
—Edward M. Hallowell, MD, author of Because I Come from a Crazy Family: The Making of a Psychiatrist
“As a psychiatrist working in a hospital that treats people with severe mental illnesses, I can say stigma is a major topic in psychiatry. Bipolar disorder has been gaining more acceptance recently. Yet there’s a long way to go before people who have it or another mental illness will get the respect and compassion that people with a physical disease receive. By telling her story in an accessible way in The Bipolar Therapist, Berger brilliantly advances this cause.”
—Saul Gorman, MD
“Fast-paced and stimulating, a must read! With unflinching honesty, Marcia Naomi Berger recounts in her latest book, The Bipolar Therapist, which reads like a novel, her downward spiral into the abyss and her courageous road to recovery.”
—Nancy Rosenfeld, co-author of New Hope for People with Bipolar Disorder
“As a psychologist who’s treated many patients with bipolar disorder, I congratulate Marcia Naomi Berger, LCSW, for writing this book. She shows that people with this illness can conquer its challenges and lead full, multifaceted lives. As more people bypass secrecy and share their mental illness-related journeys, we’ll see less shame and more self-acceptance and pride.”
—Pamela Butler, PhD, author of Talking to Yourself: How Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Can Change Your Life
“In her well-written book, The Bipolar Therapist, Berger shares her struggle with bipolar disorder during her twenties and thirties. By courageously telling her personal triumph over adversity, she addresses the stigma of mental illness. Berger’s story assists in the movement to replace prejudice against those with mental illness with respect, compassion, and understanding. Bravo!”
—Linda Bloom, co-author of An End to Arguing
“Marcia Naomi Berger’s first-person account of her journey and transformation is courageous. As she writes, ‘Someone with mental illness is much bigger and more complex than their diagnosis.’ ”
—Francis Lu, MD, Kim Professor in Cultural Psychiatry, Emeritus, UC Davis
“Berger’s voice is direct, authentic, and spare, yet full of life and intelligence. I am fascinated and uplifted.”
—Carol Olicker, MSW
“Berger’s compelling memoir lifts the veil hiding the truth about many therapists who we may think are more psychologically healthy than ourselves.”
—Francine Falk-Allen, author of Not a Poster Chil
“Riveting!”
—Amy Kahn, MSW
“This heartwarming, insightful, and brave story depicts one woman’s struggle with and victory over mental illness. Berger inspires us to have hope in the face of seemingly unexplainable symptoms. Beautifully written to touch the soul.”
—Lyn Barrett, Author of Crazy: Reclaiming Life from the Shadow of Traumatic Memory
BOOK DETAILS
Pub Date: May 17, 2022
Genre: Memoir / Christian Inspirational
Publisher: She Writes Press
Page Count: 304
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 978-1647429003
Price: $15.99