“My God, has it come to this?” Meet Grace,
white-haired, with dementia, being admitted to the
daunting asylum with an unwelcome introduction from the
student nurse. Then Percy, the crystal radio buff, with
depression. Here is Harry, the Japanese ex-POW, whose
bath-time is a re-living of battles fought and Walter,
with the dodgy and less than faithful, girl-friend. What
about Tom, who is getting secret signs from both the
Newscaster on the BBC as well as the landlady of the
local pub, or Betty who won’t fit in the coffin, and
needs a bit of encouragement? But also meet Stuart, the
very novice student nurse fearfully working on nights,
standing there being strangled, not knowing what to do,
or trying to come to grips on his first day on the ward
with shaving a corpse. Learn about what goes on in the
long asylum corridor & how to survive the laws of
the asylum jungle. Stuart has to rely on information
from the unlikeliest of sources, the Social Club hard
drinkers. Asylum Bound is a wild weird walk through the
experiences of a student nurse as he enters the unknown
world of the mental "asylum" of the 1970s. It is a
bizarre world, a world of terrible extremes. Within this
odd place there are Hogarthian characters of varying
chaotic hues, some aggressive, some sad, some disturbed
and some institutionalised, both patients and staff. It
is in this strange world that Stuart begins to
understand the origins of psychiatry and its terrible
treatments, including lobotomies, E.C.T., insulin shock
and even aversion therapy for underwear snatchers. He
has to learn about schizophrenia and bipolar disorder,
new and frightening conditions that had new and
frightening treatments and outcomes. But he finds an
asylum coming to the end of any usefulness it might ever
once have had. The patients are leaving, the staff are
changing, and, thank God, the abuses are declining. It
is a different world from anything he has experienced
before. It is a very new world. It is a life-changing
revelation. For Stuart, what started as a novelty,
progressed to fascination and was to end in tragedy. It
was the start of a long psychiatric nursing career. It
is, sadly, all true. |
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