From a writer of astonishing talents, No Straight Thing Was Ever
Made bravely discusses the many facets of living with mental illness
As a person with mood disorders that sprung up in her late teens,
Urvashi Bahuguna had to navigate being the first person in her Indian
family to admit to and seek help for a mental illness. The changes and
challenges which came with this admission and the actions that followed
not only impacted who she became as a person but also everything around
her--from her interpersonal relationships, both familial and romantic,
to the way she walked among her friends and peers and the manner in
which she connected with art, literature, popular culture--they all
became new and unknown.
Through these deeply honest essays that move between personal
narratives, anecdotes from conversations, and research-driven
storytelling, Bahuguna traverses the opportunities and roadblocks that
come her way with the tools she has available to her. From a writer of
astonishing talents, No Straight ThingWas Ever Made bravely discusses
the many facets of living with mental illness.