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Strong at the Broken Places: Voices of Illness, a Chorus of Hope | Richard M. Cohen | Strong at the Broken Places.....
 
 


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Strong at the Broken Places: Voices of Illness, a Chorus of Hope
Richard M. Cohen

Harper, 2008 - 352 pages

average customer review:based on 19 reviews
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     highly recommended  highly recommended



Strong at the Broken Places is the remarkable story of five ordinary people trapped in the complex world of serious chronic illness. In this intimate portrait, acclaimed journalist Richard M. Cohen probes lives of sickness as these individuals struggle to cope.

In 2003 Cohen published Blindsided, a bestselling memoir of illness. The outpouring of support revealed to him that not only does the public want to hear from people who overcome the challenges of illness, but that in the isolated world of illness, there are people who want their voices to be heard. Strong at the Broken Places was born of the desire of many to share their stories in the hope that the sick and those who love them will see that they are not alone.

Cohen spent three years chronicling the lives of five diverse "citizens of sickness": Denise, who suffers from ALS; Buzz, whose Christian faith helps him deal with his non-Hodgkin's lymphoma; Sarah, a determined young woman with Crohn's disease; Ben, a college student with muscular dystrophy; Larry, whose bipolar disorder is hidden within. The five are different in age and gender, race and economic status, but they are determined to live life on their own terms. Intimately involved with these patients' lives, Cohen formed intense relationships with each, talked to their families and friends, and shared joy, even in heart-breaking setbacks.

Though each individual's illness wreaks havoc in a different way, Cohen shows how their experiences are strikingly similar and offer lessons for us all—on self-determination, on courage in the face of adversity and public ignorance, on keeping hope alive, and on finding strength and peace under the most difficult of circumstances.

We are strong at the broken places, stronger than we think. In sharing these inspirational and revealing stories, Richard M. Cohen and his fellow warriors against illness offer a chorus of hope.




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Strong But Hopeful

I believe this book is a must read for everyone. It touches you, it pulls you, it makes you want to scream and yell, it breaks you apart and puts you back together...but most importantly, it makes you appreciate all that is good about your life.

I have Crohns disease and I have a mental illness, two of the topics touched upon in this book. But I am a better person today for having read Strong At The Broken Places because I know that, in spite of my infirmities, I am strong and I will survive.

Thank you Richard Cohen!!!


Strong at the Broken Places.....

This is an excellent book and very hard to put down. I have some physical problems and thought this book may help me. It truly did! When you read these stories you realized that there are people that have many more struggles in life, but yet they keep going, and most with a great attitude. I'm going to do less whining about my aches and pains.


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Sharing Their Strength

Some people may "understand" chronic illness like they are watching news video of a destructive Midwest twister - it's always happening to some other family. The statistics show otherwise. Richard Cohen does not take the reader on a pristine glass-bottom boat tour of devastating illnesses. "Strong at the Broken Places" tips the boat over and tosses the reader into the waters to swim - for a moment. Honesty begins with a trusted conversation. Cohen invites us to the table with five people, who each bluntly detail their brutal struggles with different chronic diseases. The respectful dialogue reveals that we may all have more in common with them than we care to admit. In the face of catastrophic events, we will all wish to have the strength that they have shown. Their lives set landmarks to guide others through their own realizations, acceptance and constructive determination.
Thank you, Denise, Buzz, Ben, Sarah, Larry and especially Richard, for sharing your strengths and fostering the humanity in all of us.


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"Adding quality to a life is all that matters; not its length."

Richard Cohen's "Strong at the Broken Places: Five Voices of Illness, a Chorus of Hope" shows how five chronically ill people cope with their pain and an uncertain future. The author states that more than eighty percent of Americans over sixty-five suffer from at least one chronic illness; fifty percent live with two. Ninety million Americans battle chronic illnesses every day. In this book, the statistics become real: Denise Glass suffers from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, commonly known as Lou Gehrig's disease; Buzz Bay has non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, a form of cancer that attacks the body's immune defense system; Ben Cumbo is a college student who was diagnosed with Duchenne muscular dystrophy when he was three; Sarah Glass is doing her best to function as normally as possible with Crohn's disease, a disorder of the gastrointestinal system; Larry Fricks is manic-depressive.

Cohen wrote this book because "too often the sick are seen and not heard." In "Blindsided," Cohen described his own anger and frustration when he was stricken with multiple sclerosis and colon cancer. Here, he expands his perspective to provide insight into how other chronic conditions "attack body and spirit, assaulting the quality of our lives." Too often, "we become our illnesses." In addition to the suffering that they endure every day, the chronically ill must sometimes deal with condescending and aloof medical practitioners and the ignorance and indifference of the rest of us. Cohen and his five subjects traveled together to the Harvard Club in Boston to address an audience of medical students. Their goal was to encourage future doctors to relate to their patients with more understanding and compassion.

Many people who read "Strong at the Broken Places" will become tearful contemplating the cruel fate that awaits so many. Denise's story is heart-wrenching. Richard met her when she was forty-seven; she is a pretty, petite blonde with an uncertain gate whose speech is sometimes slurred. Although she has always been determined and self-reliant, "she [lives] on a tightrope," avoiding foods that might cause her to choke and planning her outings carefully to avoid obstacles as much as possible. She needs to sleep in a particular position to ease swallowing, and dressing by herself is far from easy. She is used to people thinking that she is mentally challenged or drunk when they hear her indistinct speech. She is used to falling by now. "Everything we all take for granted has been taken away." Still, she has decided to face her illness according to this philosophy: "Every day, live your life and live your dreams."

Denise's story and the four others that Cohen relates clearly demonstrate that no two people react in the exact same way to chronic illness. Buzz Bay is a man of faith. He focuses on his family and his church, asserting that he is not afraid to die and welcomes a chance to reside in heaven with his loved ones. Ben's story is particularly poignant because he is so young. At an age when most men are finding themselves, he has been forced to focus on managing day-to-day while studying in college. Sarah was robbed of a normal childhood by Crohn's disease; she came to hate her body that was distorted by high doses of steroids. Still, she completed her education, became a social worker, and married. "My life is what it is," she declares. Larry medicated his bipolar disorder with alcohol and ended up in an institution. Now, he keeps his manic depression under control with lithium and has become a passionate advocate for the mentally ill. "Hope is to the soul what oxygen is to the body," Larry says.

This is a tough read. Cohen unflinchingly discusses not just the physical but also the psychological ramifications of chronic illnesses as well as the implications for the patients' families. My one criticism is that Cohen's four hundred page narrative could have been trimmed, since at times, it is rambling and repetitious. Nevertheless, I applaud Cohen for removing the veil from a topic that has been infrequently addressed and for exploring important themes: How do people cope with incurable diseases? What can friends, doctors, family, and the general public do to lighten their burdens? If a few minds and hearts are changed by reading "Strong at the Broken Places," then it will have served its purpose. Cohen speaks for all the chronically ill when he says that he hopes that people will "view us as more than our diagnoses and find value in who we are and what we can offer."



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