Amy has a normal life. That is, if you were to go by a definition of ‘no immediate obvious indicators of peculiarity’, and you didn’t know her very well. She has good friends, a good job, a nice enough home. This normality, however, is precariously plastered on top of a different life. A life that is Amy’s real life. The only one her brain will let her lead.
The Existence of Amy takes you inside the mind of a young woman struggling with OCD, anxiety, and depression. It’s a slower paced, book taking you through her daily life, and the effort each single action that most of us don’t even think about takes – the commute to work, making small talk with strangers, trying to maintain friendships when so many every day actions are difficult for her. While the subject matter is extremely heavy, I did not find this to be a difficult book to read. Yes, it was emotional, but mostly I felt hope for Amy even when she was in the depth of her battles.
I know many of us say things like, I feel depressed, or I’m OCD about something. I know that I don’t ever say it to be disrespectful or to disregard what people living with these go through. But after reading this I will work on not using those words in such a flippant manner again.
One woman’s struggle with mental health issues that start to take over her life.
There was a time when I thought I’d be working as a clinical psychologist right now. I even have my Master’s in it. Sadly, that wasn’t to be. When Lana Grace Riva contacted me for a review, I couldn’t pass it up. I’ve never struggled with mental health issues, but I wanted to work with people who do, and it’s stories like this that offer a window into what life is like for them. The Existence of Amy turned out to be exactly what I thought it would be, and more.
The Plot: One Woman’s Daily Struggle
Every day is a struggle for Amy. Some days or worse than others. But at least her co-workers Ed, Sally, and Nathan care about her and are her friends. It’s not always enough, though. She misses out on social events, on getting to work on time, on living a normal life.
Going in to work is a daily struggle. Going on a two week trip to Australia seems impossible. Being pushed to date seems impossible. Telling anyone what goes on in her head at any given moment is impossible. But it’s her day-to-day life, and this is her story.
The story opens with Amy detailing her daily struggle to just get out of bed and ready for the day. From there, it winds it’s way through an untold amount of time in her life, from the good days to the bad, from the highs to the lows to the really low lows. It details her thoughts, her struggles, her daily fights with herself, her inability to really understand what it’s been doing to her. She’s undiagnosed for most of the novel, which seems to make it even more important to her that she try to mask it at work as much as she can. It made my heart ache for her.
At the same time, The Existence of Amy is also something of a love story. It’s about Amy’s winding journey to learning to understand and love herself, to accept what her life has become and emerge to find a beacon of hope. It’s about her becoming able to give permission to herself to live and love and try to shape life to her terms. But it’s also about the affection she feels for others and how it complicates her already complicated life.
At it’s heart, this is the story of what mental health struggles is likely like for many. It puts the reader into the head of someone who suffers with symptoms that have a heavy impact on their daily life. It showcases how difficult it is to have anything resembling a normal life when one’s guard needs to be up every second of every day.
The Characters: Amy’s Story
The Existence of Amy is about Amy and her life. She’s a professional woman living in London who suffers with undiagnosed mental health disorders. The reader is deep in her head for the entire novel, through the good days and the bad days and the really bad days. We’re reading her thoughts and the lack of control she feels. Oddly, she comes across as detached and unemotional. She rarely mentions how she feels about anything, other than just a general sense of being out of control. The fact that so much of it is focused more on thinking states than emotional states makes it difficult to connect with her, but I also wonder if that was intentional. As someone who has never struggled with mental health issues, I’ll never know what it’s like to have it as a part of my daily life, so perhaps being so wrapped up in one’s thoughts instead of feelings is normal, though also dependent on the diagnosis.
I found that my heart really went out to Amy, both as a reader and as someone who once studied to work with individuals like her. It broke my heart that she suffered so much, but I can also appreciate the stigma and the unwillingness to know the truth. Even though Amy was written in such a way that I had a hard time connecting with her, my heart really hurt alongside her.
The Setting: A Mental Landscape
The Existence of Amy is physically set in London and Australia, but it really takes place in Amy’s head. The reader is shown the world the way Amy sees it, so it’s colored by her anxiety and what she actively avoids. It means details are a little sketchy and strong feelings, mostly that of avoidance, surround just about everything.
Amy’s mental landscape is fascinating, though. The reader is dropped right into Amy’s head from the first words, almost as though we’re sitting right there, seeing and experiencing the world as she does. It’s confusing and dizzying and often overwhelming. It’s easy to feel her anxiety, to feel the way she feels about everything she comes into contact with. As a reader, I was immediately drawn into her world, which was not necessarily the actual world she lived in.
Overall: An Incredible, Important Novel About Mental Illness
The Existence of Amy, while relatively short, is a heavy read since it’s whole focus is on mental illness and a fictional character’s experience with it. As a reader who was trained to be a therapist, this novel struck a heavy chord in me, making me feel I can start to understand the mental map of a person with mental health struggles. I also found myself wanting to scream at Amy to go and see a therapist, but I do understand the stigma linked to mental illness and the inability of many to not recognize the need for help until the breaking point. So, reading this made my heart hurt while also expanding my mind and understanding.