Society's Monster: Living with Antisocial Personality Disorder
What does it mean to be labelled a "monster" by the very society you're trying to survive in?
In this raw and unflinching memoir, the author offers a deeply personal account of life with Antisocial Personality Disorder-often misunderstood and stigmatized as "sociopathy." With brutal honesty and striking vulnerability, she sheds light on the realities of living with a condition that most people fear but few truly understand.
From the cold indifference of the medical system to the harsh judgment of professionals who claim to help, she reveals a world of mistreatment, neglect, and prejudice. Through stories of strained relationships, battles with addiction, and moments of unexpected clarity, Society's Monster confronts the myths, explores the pain, and demands a more compassionate conversation about mental health.
Author's Note:The Inspiration, For My Memoir
My work is heavily inspired by Osamu Dazai's "No Longer Human", particularly in its exploration of alienation, self-destruction, and the slow erosion of identity. Osamu Dazai's No Longer Human has always felt less like a book and more like an unsettling mirror. When Dazai wrote about performing humanity - smiling, speaking, pretending - I understood that. Living with ASPD, I often feel like I'm watching life from the outside, mimicking emotions I don't always feel, trying to connect in ways that never quite fit. My writing was born from that tension, the gap between what I show and what I actually am. Like Dazai, I'm not chasing pity or forgiveness. I just wanted to be honest about what it means to feel detached from the world, to recognize the humanity in that detachment, and to wonder if maybe there's still something real left beneath the act.