A Really Good Day

How Microdosing Made a Mega Difference in My Mood, My Marriage and My Life

UK Edition, 256 pages

English language

Published May 1, 2019 by Little, Brown Book Group.

ISBN:
978-1-4721-5289-3
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4 stars (4 reviews)

The true story of how a renowned writer's struggle with mood storms led her to try a remedy as drastic as it is forbidden: microdoses of LSD.

Her fascinating journey provides a window into one family and the complex world of a once-infamous drug seen through new eyes. When a small vial arrives in her mailbox from 'Lewis Carroll,' Ayelet Waldman is ready to try anything.

Her depression has become intolerable, severe and unmanageable; medication has failed to make a difference.

Married with four children and a robust career, she 'should' be happy, but instead her family and her work are suffering at the mercy of her mood disorder.

So she opens the vial, places two drops on her tongue, and becomes part of a burgeoning underground group of scientists and civilians successfully using therapeutic microdoses of LSD.

As Waldman charts her experience over the course of a month, during …

7 editions

Now where do I buy some LSD from...?

5 stars

I thoroughly enjoyed reading this "diary", of the authors adventures in micro-dosing LSD. Part diary, part history lesson, part manifesto, there's a lot to get your teeth into. While I knew a lot of the LSD story, having previously read Michael Pollan's How to Change Your Mind, it was interesting to revisit it all from someone else's perspective.

Review of 'A really good day' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars


I wrote most of this review right after finishing the book (Bicycle Day 2018--see below). I never posted it because I'd gone off on a rant about Cognitive Behavioral therapy and was too lazy to put the review back on track. I'm still too lazy but I found it interseting enough to tie together and post.

It's because of some article I read by her years ago, but I'd got it into my head that, like Yoko Ono is credited with ruining The Beatles, she was responsible for ruining Michael Chabon. I had always thought Mysteries of Pittsburgh and Wonder Boys his best work, which I imagined he wrote mostly pre-Ayelet. I would never have begun the current book were it not being discussed interestingly on line. And now, microdosing is a plot point in CBS TV's The Good Fight, a show about lawyers. (Coincidence?)

When I started, I found …

Review of 'A really good day' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Well, that was awkward.

I get it: to write about deeply personal issues, you have to TMI. Waldman does—and how!—what made me cringe is that she also TMIs about her relationships with her parents, husband, children. Did they sign up for this public airing? I feel uncomfortable for them all. I’m also uncomfortable with her depiction of microdosing: Waldman’s experience was well into the positive range, possibly because she went into the experiment with intention; this may cause high expectations, and possibly disappointment, in some readers.

Even so, and even though there was little material new to me, I enjoyed it. Waldman’s candidness won me over. Her frank contempt for the U.S.’s moronic War On Some Drugs, her (much abbreviated) history of the rise and fall of psychedelic research, even, yes, her copious neuroses too, all were thoughtfully written. And, finally, unpleasant as she comes off, I recognize myself in …

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3 stars

Subjects

  • Hallucinogenic drugs
  • Depressed persons
  • Health
  • Treatment
  • Manic-depressive persons
  • Manic-depressive illness
  • Therapeutic use
  • Biography