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The Man Who Couldn't Stop
- Narrated by: Daniel Philpott
- Length: 7 hrs and 53 mins
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Publisher's Summary
In this captivating fusion of science and personal memoir, writer David Adam explores the weird thoughts that exist within every mind. David has suffered from OCD for twenty years, and The Man Who Couldn’t Stop is his honest attempt to understand the condition. At what point does a harmless idea become a blinding blizzard of unwanted thoughts? Drawing on the latest research on the brain, as well as historical accounts of patients and their treatments, this is an audiobook that will challenge the way you think about what is normal, and what is mental illness.
Critic Reviews
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What listeners say about The Man Who Couldn't Stop
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- K. Sorensen
- 01-27-15
Amazing look into the mind of OCD
Really enjoyed this book. Great balance of history of mental illness of this nature with personal experience. Definitely recommend this read to anyone who is curious about this condition. I didn't expect a book of this nature to be so difficult to put down...but I was intrigued cover to cover.
5 people found this helpful
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- Brian Smith
- 08-25-18
Profound and Insightful
A brave and deep, yet concise dive into this terrifying affliction. Adam is courageous in shining a spotlight here, a subject with is little understood and highly misrepresented. His bravery in talking about his own affliction is commendable. A must read for therapists, psychologists and anyone interested in the mind.
1 person found this helpful
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- Lipok
- 01-12-22
Very well written
This book is game-changing for those dealing with OCD or who think they might have OCD; it is well written and helps you understand your symptoms very well.
OCD is a very complex disorder with a lot of different symptoms. Unfortunately, many think OCD is only about washing hands many times per day or checking locks. This book gives you a deep understanding of OCD and explains different symptoms very well.
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- clhallet
- 05-06-21
very informative and entertaining
This is a great book. it explains what OCD is in a manner that is understandable and relatable. it covers The symptoms, the various treatments through the ages, the feelings involved in, And what's wrong with the way it's classified as a condition and what might be a better way to classify it.
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- Matt Menna
- 03-19-19
Insight about a disorder and the life it steals
Great book, well written and contains a lot of informant about the disorder itself and what life is like with it.
I have to read many books such as this for my schooling and this one sticks out as one that provides a holistic overview of OCD not just what it’s like to have it as many others do.
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- Amazon Customer
- 01-09-19
Life changing!
This book is life changing for ANYONE who reads it! I have never seen such a full and honest portrayal of a mental health disorder, and the narration was gripping from beginning to end. Bravo!!
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- Barbara Alexander
- 10-05-16
Better understanding of OCD
I learned quite a bit about OCD which my son has lived with since he was a young boy, he is now 30. Wish I had read something like this sooner, I suppose I thought I understood the topic a great deal better. My only negative about this book is that he did not really get into much about the brain scans and related research that has been done over the last few years. I am certain, however, there are many books I can find which will lend more to that topic. If you are dealing with OCD or have a loved one who is, you definitely want to read this book.
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- Amazon Customer
- 09-27-16
This is what OCD is.
I've suffered with OCD and PTSD for years. I plan to suggest this book to everyone who wants a better understanding of what the disability is.
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- Dan
- 08-25-15
Captivating
Apart from being well written and narrated, this book draws the you into the mind boggling world of OCD. And leaves you thinking "but for the grace og God, that could've been me". The various cases (not least the author himself) gives the book an enormous level of credibility. After finishing this book I've started it over again straight away.
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- Judy Corstjens
- 05-01-17
A valuable book
I don't have OCD, but I'm interested as a 'third party', and I found this account very valuable to help me understand, as far as one can (OCD does seem so odd to someone who is not affected directly). I do believe that David Adam is a genuine expert on the subject through being a sufferer himself, with insights more worthwhile than those of 'expert psychologists' who try to treat sufferers. He weaves his own story in with his reading of scientific research and his own experience of treatment, to provide a convincing overview of the whole topic. I cannot recommend this book to sufferers, but I would recommend it enthusiastically to anyone in my position, trying to be sympathetic and helpful to a sufferer.
8 people found this helpful
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- Mark
- 06-09-18
problem with the first chapter and its verbal pres
I bought this book as an insight into this topic. The beginning of it was over acted and very dramatic. rather than being informative. Its description of a triggering event causing OCD and mental trauma actually caused me some actual distress, which was very weird. If you dont have anxiety or OCD its interesting if you do this is not likely to help. I never got past the first 30 minutes, now every time I think about the book I recall his anxiety. Not a good listen if you have anxiety. I think I will buy a book written in a more clinical and less emotive way to understand this condition.
4 people found this helpful
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- Amazon Customer
- 11-29-14
Lively, informative, and personable
Any additional comments?
This book brilliantly uses a rich and personal account to educate the listener about OCD - both what it is, and what it is not. It's a really balanced perspective, helpful both to myself as a Trainee Clinical Psychologist and I'd imagine to listeners who themselves are experiencing challenges associated with obsessive and compulsive symptoms.
2 people found this helpful
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- g mac
- 10-13-20
brilliant.
I loved this book. it is honest, funny, intelligent, shocking, and explains how otherwise completely normal and seemingly healthy people can be hit hard by the genuine pain of OCD, but they're friends and family don't know it.
1 person found this helpful
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- moo
- 08-13-21
A must listen
A wonderful mix of personal experience and medical information both modern and historical. And yet cleverly blended to produce a narrative which flows and holds your attention. An eye opener for all.
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- Sara Hurst
- 05-31-21
“Not really what it says on the label”
This book about ocd promises a look into the author’s personal journey and development, which is probably what most people would pick the book up for. Whilst there is some of that, it often wanders into details of medical history that are irrelevant and even tedious. Honestly, how many ocd patients today would even co template a lobotomy ? Why give us the history of the procedure, then?
Came across as unnecessary fluff. Without those parts, this would have been a 4 stars for me. I enjoyed the excellent narration and even the humour with which this otherwise very heavy topic is presented by the author.
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- sammieseagull
- 05-27-21
Stopped listening after 2 or 3 minutes
Stopped listening after a few mins due to the swearing and taking God's name in vain. A pity, as I wanted to hear this. Books should have warnings about swearing.
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- Eoghan
- 07-25-19
Great personal account, poor critique
Adam gives a fantastic account of how OCD has affected him, and relays the experiences of others. Unfortunately, when he steps beyond that things get ropey in places.
It is clear that Adam has benefitted greatly from psychiatric care - a standard multidisciplinary team approach with medication, talk therapy and support. But then he goes on to give out about psychiatry basically not being the magical saviour of everyone with mental illness, ignoring the massive benefit seen by people who otherwise have no chance of improving. He also ignores the failure of treatments in other areas of medicine.
One specific set of criticisms around diagnosis in psychiatry stands out. Adam complains that ‘tick 5 boxes and you’re depressed, 4 and you’re not’, and psychiatry should work more like physical medicine instead of having these arbitrary cutoffs decided by committee. This ignores that hypertension, sepsis, diabetes, cancer and so forth are diagnsosed in exactly the same way. Adam in fact specifically refers to hypertension in exactly that way, but fails to draw the parallel with the psychiatric equivalents.
Overall the book is still an excellent read, especially if unfamiliar with OCD and the related impact this can have.
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- Thanos
- 02-12-19
Real life,history of the disorder & brain science!
a very interesting combination of historical facts anecdotes and real life experiences of the author regarding add disorder that is based on the brain and affect the mind.
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- Karen Buckley
- 07-15-22
Confronting. Informative. Real
Having OCD, an educational read, albeit confronting. Worthwhile for OCD sufferers and mental health professionals alike.
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- Anonymous User
- 10-25-20
great to understand experience but lacks depth
this book gives great perspective of what it is like to experience OCD but for me lacked reflective depth around causation and was dismissive of some treatment approaches.
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- Yael Clark
- 11-28-19
Think you know OCD?
Interesting and informative. Personal and yet scientific. Read this if you want to understand OCD.
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- Neill
- 03-14-17
PDF or readable version as well
Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?
In Psych student studying OCD
What other book might you compare The Man Who Couldn't Stop to, and why?
Don't know of any to compare it with
Have you listened to any of Daniel Philpott’s other performances? How does this one compare?
No I haven't
Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?
NO I'm studying the book - over a week.
Any additional comments?
Need a readable with audio only big let down for me.