"Early one morning in April of 2016 I woke up and seriously contemplated the possibility that I would never be able to generate the strength, focus, and courage to get out of bed. The combination of crippling anxiety, chronic pain, muscle atrophy, and the fascinating mix of pharmaceuticals coursing through my body had, I feared, finally broken me. My life terrified me. I had been fighting some combination of these battles for just over three years at this point, and I didn't think I could do it for one more day."
Representative Adam Smith was successful by all measures, with a long, distinguished career in Congress and a loving marriage with children. Yet seemingly out of nowhere, his body and mind broke down to the point where every day was a relentless struggle to just keep moving. It's a struggle millions of Americans know all too well. Would he be able to meet his responsibilities as a husband and father? Could he still maintain his breakneck professional schedule and continue to do his job well? He soon realized he couldn't will himself well--he needed help. Thus began a desperate search for the right diagnosis and treatment for his mental and physical pain that lasted over six years and involved more than a hundred different health care providers. With unflinching honesty, Smith reveals how he got to this lowest point in life, and how he slowly, painfully, and unevenly found his way back to having a calmer mind and being free of chronic pain and medication.
Smith discovered the severe limitations of our nation's health care system, and brought him face to face with the cost of the stigma our country has against admitting to and dealing with mental health issues. He learned that life isn't about finding that quick fix or clear-cut mental and physical program to stop worrying and struggling. It's about learning who you are, understanding your body and mind well enough to face those struggles that we will all inevitably face, and then being able to enjoy your life even when those struggles come.
He grew up in SeaTac, Washington, in the center of the district he now represents. His father was a baggage handler at SeaTac airport and his mother was a homemaker. He worked his way through college loading trucks for UPS, earning a BA in political science from Fordham University in 1987. He spent his summers back home in the Seattle area working on political campaigns and doing various jobs to pay the bills. He got his law degree at the University of Washington in 1990, and that same year won election to the Washington State Senate becoming, at 25, the youngest state senator in the country at that time. Smith has been married since 1993 to his wife, Sara, and they have two children, Kendall, age 22, and Jack, age 19.
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May is observed as #MentalHealthAwarenessMonth, and Democratic @RepAdamSmith (WA-09) aims to break stigmas and raise awareness with his upcoming book, "Lost and Broken: My Journey Back from Chronic Pain and Crippling Anxiety." https://t.co/cIpkRyYja3 #MentalHealthMatters
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TONIGHT: Q&A with @RepAdamSmith, author of “Lost and Broken,” talks about his decades-long struggle living with chronic pain and anxiety and discusses his efforts to find the right treatment – 8pm ET on C-SPAN https://t.co/zqbzGqHfS8 https://t.co/anAmbu0ZBq
--Lynn Lyons, LICSW, author of The Anxiety Audit, coauthor of Anxious Kids, Anxious Parents
--Senator Mark Kelly and former Congresswoman Gabby Giffords
--Ben Affleck, director, actor, and co-founder Eastern Congo Initiative
--Elizabeth A. Stanley, PhD, Georgetown University professor and author of Widen the Window: Training Your Brain and Body to Thrive During Stress and Recover from Trauma
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