103014i-Baffler

The latest issue of Cambridge-based journal The Baffler has an utterly conflicted release party coming Thursday to Lilypad: a celebration of chronic depression.

Scialabba
Scialabba

The main item in issue No. 26 is โ€œThe Endlessly Examined Lifeโ€ by George Scialabba, a Cantabrigian who has decided to reveal scenes from 45 years of treatment for major depression โ€“ย as told throughย his psychiatristsโ€™ notes from McLean Hospital, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard University.

โ€œWe believe this occasion marks the first time clinical notes on mental health have ever been published,โ€ editor in chief John Summers said via press release and magazine blurb. โ€œIf youโ€™ve ever wondered what your shrinks are saying about you, then come and listen to what Georgeโ€™s have been saying about him through decades of therapies.โ€

Scialabba, a Harvard-employed essayist, critic and contributor to The Boston Globe, will be on hand to talk about what Summers calls his โ€œstrange and wonderful contributionโ€ and its importance, and so will psychiatrist and author Gary Greenberg, to discuss the changing approaches to care seen in Scialabbaโ€™s notes. There will also be a screening of an animated short by Signe Baumane calledย โ€œRocks in my Pockets,โ€ which is โ€“ appropriately for the event โ€“ both funny and about depression.

The doors open at 6:30 p.m. and the conversation begins promptly at 7 p.m., Summers said. The film screens at 8:30 p.m. Lilypad is at 1353 Cambridge St., Inman Square.

A stronger

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