The Forum > General Discussion > Mental Illness and Chaos Narratives
Mental Illness and Chaos Narratives
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One sub-category of the genre of life-writing is this chaos narrative. It is written after the excesses of the chaos have gone; the experience of the extremes of the chaos are incompatible with the writing or the telling for some. To put this another way, it is difficult to write the story while in the midst of some of the more extreme parts of the experience. People like the famous dancer Nijinski, among others, have placed their experience in a written context during their suffering.
Those who are living in the midst of mental illness episodes are now telling of their experiences more and more in recent years as they come-out. Their stories are often bizarre, but in this crazy world their stories are only one of many kinds of traumatic, bizarre and extreme forms of suffering that the world is drowning in at present.
Telling and, even more so, writing is a way of taking control and creating order, thus giving an account of what was once experienced as chaos, but now has a framework of meaning. To some extent, as a famous psychiatrist Dr.Victor Frankel once put it, suffering ceases to be suffering, the moment it finds a meaning. That is partly true and even if it is entirely true it is not always seen that way by the sufferers. Writing can be therapeutic but it does not eliminate all pain all the time. This is only saying the obvious. We get the stories of chaos narratives on TV and there are more and more of them on the internet at mental illness sites which can be of great value to sufferers.-Ron Price, Tasmania