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"The most difficult thing about being misdiagnosed with a mental illness is the more you fight it, the crazier you seem." At the age of twenty-three, Kate Recore began to suffer from a common brain disease. Although signs pointed directly at epilepsy, her neurologists misdiagnosed her with mental illness. For almost a year, Kate struggled against her worsening mind-altering seizures without any medical help. She lost her memory of the past, and her dreams for the future. After finally being tested and properly diagnosed, her journey through epilepsy began. Many years of failed drug therapies stretched before her. She battled against doctors who refused to consider the importance of their patient's quality of life, never changing course to help her manage her disease. Finally finding a true caregiver, Kate became well again. With a new drug and a new place to call home, she learned to let go of who she was, and love who she is. Misdiagnosis affects over twelve million people in the United State every year, and is considered the country's third-leading cause of death. While told against the backdrop of one patient's life, Brain Storm: An Electrifying Journey resonates with anyone fighting the overpriced, inadequate American healthcare system. By fearlessly adding her voice to the demand for better care, Kate Recore hopes to blaze a trail for all patients calling for help, and needing to be heard."It seems inappropriate to call an autobiographical account of epilepsy and medical malfunction a page turner but, in fact, that is what BRAIN STORM is-a story that keeps you turning the pages. Kate Recore educates us on the reality of health insurance, doctoring, diagnosis, functional brain damage, epilepsy, and familial influence without losing the thread of her plot, a plot created from lived experience. You will read because it is interesting. You will learn because it is unavoidable. You will be inspired because you will be awakened. Don't miss this one." Dr. Lynette Louise (The Brain Broad - www.lynettelouise.com) award-winning neurotherapist, humanitarian, director, speaker, writer, brain-change expert, author of MIRACLES ARE MADE: A Real-Life Guide to Autism
An Introspective and Honest Analysis of a Teacher's First Year's ExperiencesOne out of every ten first-year teachers leave the profession after that frightful first year - and author Victor Z. Stanhope knows why. Despite the expansive list of books and resources geared towards helping first-year teachers, none of them illuminate the realities of the first-year teaching experience. THE TEACHING MIRROR: LESSONS LEARNED AS A FIRST-YEAR TEACHER is the first book to explore a first-year teacher's experience through analyzing journal entries written before and throughout the school year. This book synthesizes the author's journal entries and experience into lessons for first-year teachers to help them better cope with their upcoming or current life as a new teacher.This book is very helpful for new teachers in that it: -Provides incoming first-year teachers with an honest and practical perspective of the experience.-Connects with and addresses first-year teachers' emotions and worries.-Offers applied tips and exemplifies their effectiveness.-Illustrates the author's failures, remedies, successes, and learned lessons."In Victor's generous book, THE TEACHING MIRROR, he has shared his 'failures' and successes, citing each as valuable since 'teaching in itself is a learning experience.' He favors teaching skill over content, clearly stating and restating your expectations, and creating a 'class culture' where thoughtfulness abides. He stresses making lessons authentic, meaningful, and most importantly, relevant. He describes his 'mini-emotional collapse' treated by meditation and journaling when therapy was unavailable. I enjoyed reading every page of this book and recommend it to every teacher, not only first-year teachers, as there are nuggets of wisdom for everyone experiencing successes and failures on the bumpy road to becoming a great teacher, a master teacher." Judy Woods-Knight, author of Teaching School is a Scream! Confessions of a Career Substitute
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