Sadie McCarney's Your Therapist Says It's Magical Thinking is a
buoyant second collection that playfully navigates the turbulent waters
of life with mental illness and neurodivergence. In much of the book,
history and science are treated the way they are often viewed by a brain
in mental turmoil: places and events get switched around, facts get
rewritten, and the fantastical reigns supreme. Through poems ranging
from didactic (the horrible "self-care" advice received by the poet when
she was struggling most) to historical fiction (patients in an asylum in
1800s England), to the quirky and unexpectedly fantastical (a rainbow
carpool unicorn, a young child's timeline reversing each morning, and an
everything bagel that includes competing theories of time), McCarney
digs deep into the muck of her own lived experience. She resurfaces
with, if not gold, at least an old time capsule and a few treasured
hunks of bone. Your Therapist Says It's Magical Thinking highlights
the sometimes dubious (but always jubilant) inner workings of a mentally
unwell brain at play -- especially within the context of a larger
society that frequently seeks to tamp down this weird and rare form of
magic.