![]() ![]() ![]() Gregory's impressive and disturbing memoir uncovers the truths of this elusive and disturbing form of child abuse that is often overlooked and misdiagnosed. Not until adulthood, when she hears a professor describe MPB during a lecture, does Gregory realize what the real problem is. Then, undernourished and doped up on drugs for problems that don't exist, Gregory is dragged from hospital to hospital in search of""answers."" Interspersed throughout Gregory's narrative are real medical records that show the efforts of dozens of doctors, procedures and surgeries to""heal"" her, efforts which instead become the source of new illnesses. When her mother feeds her handfuls of pills, withholds food or instructs her to""act sick,"" Gregory does as she is told because she wants to please her. Set in towns of rural obscurity, Gregory's memoir movingly describes how, as a""sick"" child, she believed that her constant feelings of exhaustion and lethargy were caused by some illness in herself rather than by her mother's complicated and abusive rituals. ![]() MBP, a psychological disorder in which caretakers, usually themselves the victims of traumatic abuse,""make an otherwise healthy child sick"" as a way of gaining attention and approval. Its four oclock, and she hasnt been allowed to eat anything all day. ![]() Just twelve, she is tall, skinny, and weak. The first of its kind, this compelling memoir recounts the story of a childhood affected by Munchausen by proxy disease, a.k.a. A young girl is perched on the cold chrome of yet another doctors examining table, missing yet another day of school. ![]()
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