USA Today Series
12-06-1995
Famous shock-therapy patients
Dick Cavett, talk-show host. "In my case, ECT was miraculous. My wife was
dubious, but when she came into my room afterward, I sat up and said, 'Look
who's back among the living.' It was like a magic wand,'' he wrote in People
in 1992.
Lou Reed, rock musician. "Lou's conservative parents, Sidney and Toby Reed,
sent their (17-year-old) son to a psychiatrist, requesting that he cure Lou
of his homosexual feelings and alarming mood swings. . . . Lou suffered
through eight weeks of shock treatments haunted by the fear that in an
attempt to obliterate the abnormal from his personality, his parents had
destroyed him,'' according to Transformer: The Lou Reed Story.
Thomas Eagleton, former Democratic senator. He lost the Democratic vice
presidential nomination in 1972 when it was revealed that he received shock
treatment for depression.
Ernest Hemingway, writer. He had shock therapy at the Mayo Clinic in 1961,
shortly before committing suicide. He told biographer A.E. Hotchner, "What
is the sense of ruining my head and erasing my memory, which is my capital,
and putting me out of business? It was a brilliant cure but we lost the
patient.''
Sylvia Plath, poet. She wrote a shock therapy scene in her autobiographical
novel The Bell Jar: "I wondered what terrible thing it was that I had done''
to get shock therapy.
By USA TODAY
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