Lori Schiller (born April 26, 1959), now Lori Joe Bach is a memoir of The Quiet Room, author of trips from torture and insanity. When she was 17 years old, she began to hear that voice, then she was diagnosed with schizophrenia [1]. Quiet Room - Get out of pain and crazy journey, follow her story and navigate her family and friends in her mental disorder
Schiller was born in Michigan on April 26, 1959. Her parents, Marvin and Nancy raised her, and there were two younger brothers, Mark and Steven. She moved to Chicago and Los Angeles, moved to Scarsdale, New York, where she was promoted to college. She graduated Scarsdale High School with an average GPA of 9, and served as a member of the Ball Committee and as a literary editor of the school magazine. From then on, she continued her studies at Tufts University in Massachusetts. In the summer of 1976, she worked as a consultant at Lincoln Farm Summer Camp and began to hear the voice telling her that death is a symptom of schizophrenia. [2]
On February 24, 2002, she married Stephen Douglas Bach with Boca Raton. They live in Lake Worth, Florida and Schiller is an expert at the Henderson Mental Health Center. Schiller continued 31 schizophrenia a day to minimize his symptoms. Clozapine is the last time I took some medicine. She continues to claim mental illness with her parents Marvin and Nancy Schiller who have a program called Welcome Home Center with Bucharaton 's Ruth Rales Jewish Family Service Center. . 3]
The author of "Quiet Room - Toss and Crazy Journey", published by Warner Books in 1994 and written by Amanda Bennett, was Schiller. Memoirs recorded her fight against psychosis. Memoirs replace literature guilds and double day book clubs. Memoirs include her therapist, her brothers, her parents and her own chapters. It follows Syrah's spiritual and emotional obstacles, entrance and exit, multiple suicide attempts, and multiple treatment plans. Schiller explains her struggle against psychosis and its influence on his family.
Schiller currently teaches doctors, nurses and nurses nationwide hospital nationwide hospitals such as West Chester Hospital's hospital in New York for schizophrenia course. [2] She currently has conversation with the local police in crisis team intervention education, has been a member of the Board of the National Association of Mentally Handicapped since 1998, has 10 NAMI to help people with mental disorders I taught a weekly course. She is an officer at the South County Mental Health Center and in 2009 was appointed as the annual peer expert of the Florida Community Mental Health Association. [3]
In 1995, Schiller signed a contract of 800 thousand dollars with Touchstone Pictures to make a movie based on the book even though it was not yet a movie. [2]
Lorisira 's lifetime began to be interpreted at the age of seventeen. Prior to that, I was fighting for success, I was also known for her pleasure and sense of humor. Schiller maintains an average of 9 points at Scarsdale High School, is the oldest of the three children in the family, and is a member of the Ball Committee and a scholarly journal literary editor. In the summer of 1976, when she was counselor at a summer camp, there was a first sign of a crazy crazy journey - that she finally returned to a magical journey. When she lay down in bed and meditating past romance in the summer, she suddenly heard a loud voice "You must die!"
Lori Schiller (born April 26, 1959), now Lori Joe Bach is a memoir of The Quiet Room, author of trips from torture and insanity. When she was 17 years old, she began listening to the sound, then she was diagnosed with schizophrenia. Quiet Room - Get out of pain and crazy journey, trace her story and navigate her family and friends in her mental disorder. Schiller was born in Michigan on April 26, 1959. Her parents, Marvin and Nancy raised her, and there were two younger brothers, Mark and Steven. She moved to Chicago and Los Angeles, moved to Scarsdale, New York, where she was promoted to college. She graduated Scarsdale High School with an average GPA of 9, and served as a member of the Ball Committee and as a literary editor of the school magazine. From then on, she continued her studies at Tufts University in Massachusetts.