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novella42's review against another edition
Graphic: Body horror, Gore, Mental illness, Panic attacks/disorders, Excrement, Medical content, Dementia, Medical trauma, and Injury/Injury detail
swimmer120x's review against another edition
3.75
I think chapter 9: letter to my insurance company was my favorite. It is relatable to the struggles we face.
Graphic: Chronic illness, Mental illness, Panic attacks/disorders, Suicidal thoughts, and Medical content
Moderate: Animal death and Sexual content
Minor: Alcohol
jenniferbbookdragon's review against another edition
5.0
Graphic: Chronic illness, Cursing, Mental illness, and Medical content
happilyhalliwell's review against another edition
4.0
Moderate: Medical content
Minor: Suicidal thoughts
okiecozyreader's review against another edition
4.5
In this one, she goes even deeper into her experiences and troubles with depression and health insurance, treatments and ups and downs. Some of it felt like journal entries sprinkled with her light-hearted ramblings that made me laugh. I ended up listening to much of it on my trip. I have struggled some with anxiety and depression for much of my life, but not to the extent Jenny writes about in this book. If you don’t have the experience, I feel like this might help people understand the suffering some go through. I do think it is courageous for her to tell her stories and read them out loud - I wonder how painful the process really is - reliving the treatments and such. She mentions her family traveling without her bc of her personal pain, and how some treatments have allowed her to finally travel with her daughter. So grateful for that.
The book also has some illustrations and photos scattered throughout. The audio ends with a chapter that tells how she did the audio in her closet during the 2020 lockdown. Both versions are terrific in different ways. I also love the last chapter about the cover illustration:
“… I’ve never seen a collection of art that more perfectly encapsulates how I felt about my own battle with depression and anxiety and the monsters in my head.
My personal beasties are ugly and ridiculous and they weigh me down and are exhausting to carry around. Sometimes it feels like they are larger than I am…
…
And yet, there is something wonderful in embracing the peculiar and extraordinary monsters that make us unique.” P281, 282
Graphic: Chronic illness, Medical content, and Medical trauma
qrschulte's review against another edition
5.0
Graphic: Animal death, Chronic illness, Cursing, Mental illness, Panic attacks/disorders, Blood, Excrement, Medical content, Dementia, Grief, and Medical trauma
Moderate: Suicidal thoughts, Forced institutionalization, and Alcohol
Minor: Gore and Fire/Fire injury
kelly_e's review against another edition
3.25
Author: Jenny Lawson
Genre: Non Fiction Humour
Rating: 3.25
Pub Date: April 6, 2021
T H R E E • W O R D S
Relatable • Unscripted • Vulnerable
📖 S Y N O P S I S
In Broken, Jenny brings readers along on her mental and physical health journey, offering heartbreaking and hilarious anecdotes along the way.
With people experiencing anxiety and depression now more than ever, Jenny humanizes what we all face in an all-too-real way, reassuring us that we’re not alone and making us laugh while doing it.
💭 T H O U G H T S
Broken is my first experience reading Jenny Lawson, despite this being her third book and I was left with very mixed thoughts upon finishing it.
On the one hand, I absolutely love the focus on mental illness, and some of the chapters felt so thought=provoking and validating. She definitely gets real, humanizing mental illness, and that's where the value of this book lies. She talks candidly about how difficult is it to get appropriate care and treatment, while also acknowledging her own privilege on that front. The difficulty of receiving proper care is in part where the shame and stigma stem from.
And on the other hand, her humour and oversharing just didn't work for me. As someone who also deals with anxiety and depression, I found the self-deprecating to be too much. I know it's the lived reality, but it was extremely difficult to read. Lastly, the writing definitely felt disjointed, which was maybe the intent, but the lack of flow made the whole experience less than enjoyable.
I took away some extremely validating quotes, and while some parts were 5 stars, unfortunately others were completely unnecessary. Broken is certainly a deep dive into the workings of her mind, and is a valuable addition to mental illness literature.
📚 R E C O M M E N D • T O
• people dealing with mental illness
• mental health professionals
🔖 F A V O U R I T E • Q U O T E S
"Forgive yourself. For being broken. For being you. For thinking those are things that you need forgiveness for."
"Nothing lasts forever. The good and the bad."
"You can't fight severe mental illness without mental health programs. Without therapy, medication, and outreach. We rely on these to keep us going - to save us from ourselves. Out families rely on them to help us and to protect the world from us. But actually getting help has been [and continues to be] the most difficult, unrewarding, shame-inducing, and unending project I have ever undertaken in my entire life.
It's hard. You give up. you give up fighting for treatment. Sometimes you give up your treatment altogether. Sometimes you give up on living.
I worked with doctors and the TMS people and submitted appeal after appeal. I fought with my insurance company. I finally submitted a letter to them. It's the one from two chapters back. And then it was approved. I'm not sure why. Maybe they just have up on fighting me. If I could have cried I would have, but I was too numb. I still had to pay a lot of it, but it helped.
And I'm lucky. I have support and insurance and a voice and money to buy the medication and treatment that isn't provided to me. What about those who don't have those things? We fail them. We fail ourselves. They are our children and our coworkers and our parents and the homeless person on the street and the boy who will marry your child and the girl who will save your life. They are the insurance clerks I speak with who tell me they deal with the same problems. They are us.
If you've dealt with this bullshit and you're still around, I salute you. It is hard and embarrassing and makes me furious. You deserve better. We all do. End rant."
"Sometimes the people you love leave you even when they don't want to and you shatter into pieces. You may not be able to find all of those pieces again because when they left they took a few with them. It hurts, but the pain eventually becomes bearable and even sacred because it's how you carry the people you've lost with you. And if you're lucky you can one day see that the hollow spots you carry are in the shape of their face or their hands or the love they gave you. Those holes ache, but they are a monument to the lost, a traveling sacred place to honor them and remind you of how to love enough to leave your own marks on others."
Graphic: Chronic illness, Mental illness, and Panic attacks/disorders
Moderate: Ableism, Cursing, Fatphobia, Sexual content, Suicidal thoughts, Excrement, and Medical content
Minor: Dementia
depression, anxietyjpbacik's review against another edition
5.0
Graphic: Chronic illness, Cursing, Mental illness, Panic attacks/disorders, and Medical content
Moderate: Cursing, Suicidal thoughts, Medical trauma, and Alcohol
Jenny Lawson is the best. While I've adored every book of hers, this one is especially funny, poignant, relatable, and beautiful.alysereadsbooks's review against another edition
4.25
Graphic: Chronic illness, Mental illness, and Sexual content
Moderate: Suicidal thoughts and Medical content
Minor: Ableism and Self harm
ladythana's review against another edition
5.0
Graphic: Mental illness and Medical content
Moderate: Panic attacks/disorders, Terminal illness, and Dementia
Minor: Death, Sexual content, Suicidal thoughts, Forced institutionalization, Vomit, and Grief