Psychiatry, America's Holocaust: The Twelve Steps Curing Mental Illness, Developing the Nonviolent Adult Mind
From Sleeping on the Streets to Founding a Nonprofit Organization
by
Book Details
About the Book
Collapsing from the grief of not being loved, twenty years old, Clover Greene was committed to psychiatry. Just as after any horror to horrible to be real, after four electric shocks, Greene developed hysterical amnesia, vaguely remembering being locked up by psychiatry.
Psychiatry, America’s Holocaust: The Twelve Steps Curing Mental Illness, Developing the Nonviolent Adult Mind chronicles author Clover Greene’s journey back from the precipice of suicidal and homicidal terror. It is a collection of Greene’s thoughts, original poetry, and helpful information designed to help the reader to better understand the ups and downs of recovering from mental illness.
Over a period of time, Greene was recommitted through psychiatry and forced to take drugs. Unable to escape to the outside, Greene’s suppressed feelings of confusion periodically built up and exploded into suicidal and homicidal drug rages. Real doctors in real hospitals saved Greene’s life from suicide attempts and the life-threatening physical damage caused by psychiatric drugs. After thirty-one years under a psychiatrist’s care, Greene was incredibly still alive, saved by a twelvestep program and the support of others in the same position.
In this memoir, Greene shares the harrowing account of escaping psychiatry alive and being reborn in the spirit of love.
About the Author
After thirty-one years of psychiatry, Alcoholics Anonymous developed Clover Greene’s adult mind, and Greene escaped psychiatry alive to found the nonprofit Welcome World, a 12-Step Humans Anonymous, and Clover’s Dream Thrift Store and Food Bank. Clover is married to Richard Greene; they live in Colorado.