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A Thousand Ways to Pay Attention

A Memoir of Coming Home to My Neurodivergent Mind

Audiobook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
It should have been Rebecca Schiller's dream come true: moving her young family to the English countryside to raise goats and coax their own fruit and vegetables from the land. But, as she writes: The summer of striding out toward a life of open fields and sacks of corn, I brought a confused black hole of something pernicious but not yet acknowledged along for the ride. Rebecca's health begins to crumble, with bewildering symptoms: frequent falls, uncontrollable rages, and mysterious lapses in memory. As she fights to be seen by specialists, her fledgling homestead-and her family-hang by increasingly tenuous threads. And when her diagnosis finally comes, it is utterly unexpected: severe ADHD. In her scramble for answers, Rebecca's consciousness alternately sears with pinpoint focus and spirals with connections. Childhood memories resurface with new meaning, and her daily life entwines with the history of women who tended this land before her. Her family weathers their growing pains where generations of acorns have fallen to rise again as trees, where ancient wolves and lynx once stalked the shadows. Written in unsparing, luminous prose, this is an all-absorbing memoir of one woman's newfound neurodivergence-and a clarion call to overturn the narrative that says minds are either normal and good or different and broken.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 28, 2022
      In this exquisite and probing narrative, Guardian contributor Schiller (Your No Guilt Pregnancy Plan) candidly charts her experience with ADHD while embarking on a quest to live off the land. As Britain’s desiccated moors blazed in 2017, Schiller and her husband’s fantasies of raising their family “a little closer to the earth” became urgent. Finding their rural idyll on a two-acre homestead outside of London, the couple seeded vegetable beds, planted fruit trees, and built animal sheds. Schiller richly evokes the delights of living in the countryside—harvesting “blackberries from the hedges” and “putting the goats to bed”—but reveals that her bucolic retreat was soon disrupted by a “tangle of energy, certainty, ambition... anger” that made her “unable to sit still, to speak slowly, or make decisions.” From here, the narrative spirals into looking-glass territory as Schiller vividly recreates manic bouts of research propelled by her agitation and rising awareness of the climate crisis—“of the heat raging in the Amazon and of other forests being lost.” When she discovers that ADHD could be partially responsible for her violent fits, Schiller refuses to let the label end her self-inquiry, instead using it to explore the wonders that arise from being different. By eschewing tidy resolutions, Schiller’s work offers a complex look into a beautiful mind.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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