
Sickened
Panoramica di Sickened
In "Sickened," Julie Gregory exposes Munchausen by proxy through her own medical records - a mother who manufactured her illness for attention. This landmark memoir sparked critical reforms in child protection and features a foreword by MBP expert Marc Feldman. What medical signs did everyone miss?
Temi chiave in Sickened
- munchausen by proxy
- medical child abuse
- fabricated illness
- maternal betrayal
- survivor testimony
Citazioni da Sickened
"the most complex and lethal form of child maltreatment known today."
"Look, I'm trying to help you. Stop acting all normal when we get in here."
The family maintained appearances in public-smiling in vacation photos while hiding their dysfunction.
Julie would hover mentally above herself while nurses prepared her.
Julie's identity became inextricably linked to her status as a sick child.
Personaggi di Sickened
- Julie GregoryThe author and survivor of Munchausen by proxy
- Sandy GregoryJulie's mother who fabricated her illnesses
- Dan GregoryJulie's father, a traumatized Vietnam veteran
- Grandma MadgeJulie's maternal grandmother
- Dr. PhillipsJulie's pediatrician at Township Family Physicians
Sull'autore
Sull'autore di Sickened
Julie Gregory, author of the acclaimed memoir Sickened: The True Story of a Lost Childhood, is a pioneering advocate for survivors of Munchausen by proxy (MBP) and childhood trauma.
Born in Columbus, Ohio, in 1969, Gregory draws from her harrowing personal experience as an MBP survivor to expose the hidden realities of medical child abuse. Her work, rooted in the memoir genre, explores themes of resilience, identity, and psychological manipulation, offering a searing critique of healthcare and social systems.
In addition to Sickened, she authored My Father’s Keeper, further delving into familial dysfunction and survival. Gregory’s writing has been praised for its raw Midwestern voice and unflinching honesty, resonating with clinicians, abuse survivors, and literary critics alike.
A sought-after speaker on trauma recovery, her memoir has been translated into multiple languages and continues to spark global conversations about covert abuse.
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FAQ su questo libro
Sickened is a harrowing memoir detailing Julie Gregory’s childhood under her mother’s Munchausen by proxy (MBP) abuse, a rare form of maltreatment where caregivers fabricate or induce illnesses in children for attention. The book chronicles Julie’s traumatic medical ordeals, her family’s chaotic life in a rural trailer, and her eventual escape and healing as an adult.
This memoir is ideal for readers interested in trauma survival stories, psychology, or rare forms of child abuse. It’s particularly valuable for healthcare professionals, social workers, and individuals studying family dysfunction or the long-term impacts of psychological manipulation.
Yes, Sickened is a nonfiction memoir. Julie Gregory’s firsthand account includes excerpts from her medical records and visceral recollections of her mother’s manipulation, providing irrefutable evidence of her lived experience with MBP.
MBP is a psychological disorder where a caregiver (typically a parent) invents or induces medical symptoms in a child to gain sympathy or attention from medical staff. Sickened exposes how Julie’s mother subjected her to unnecessary surgeries, medications, and tests under this guise.
Julie survived by gradually recognizing her mother’s deceit, distancing herself emotionally, and pursuing education and therapy. Her resilience and eventual confrontation with her past allowed her to rebuild her life and protect her younger sister from similar abuse.
The memoir critiques healthcare providers’ repeated failure to detect MBP, despite Julie’s glaringly inconsistent symptoms. Their naivety and lack of training in identifying psychological abuse prolonged her suffering, underscoring systemic gaps in child protection.
Major themes include survival, toxic family bonds, the manipulation of trust, and the psychological scars of abuse. The book also explores the duality of love and control in dysfunctional relationships.
A poignant quote reflects Julie’s self-awareness: “I surround myself with broken people... A cracked companion makes me look more whole”. Another captures her trauma: “Memories that hang heaviest... leave permanent wrinkles in the fabric of your soul”.
The memoir depicts a volatile household marked by her mother’s narcissism, her father’s passivity, and Julie’s desperate attempts to please. It reveals how abuse intertwines with distorted expressions of love, loyalty, and survival.
Some readers note the memoir’s unrelenting intensity, which can feel overwhelming. Others highlight its narrow focus on Julie’s perspective, though this subjectivity is central to its raw authenticity.
MBP remains underdiagnosed, and Sickened raises critical awareness about covert child abuse. Its themes of gaslighting and psychological manipulation resonate in broader discussions about mental health and familial trauma.
Unlike broader addiction or abuse narratives, Sickened offers a rare window into MBP, blending medical documentation with visceral storytelling. Its unflinching voice distinguishes it from more reflective or redemptive memoirs.

















