Author: | Wayne Mitchell | ISBN: | 9780463003275 |
Publisher: | Wayne Mitchell | Publication: | September 3, 2018 |
Imprint: | Smashwords | Language: | English |
Author: | Wayne Mitchell |
ISBN: | 9780463003275 |
Publisher: | Wayne Mitchell |
Publication: | September 3, 2018 |
Imprint: | Smashwords |
Language: | English |
Tales from the Psych Ward is eight episodes from the chaotic life of someone who has their own very erotic reality totally separate from the world’s reality. The teller of these tales regularly jumps from normal reality into his own strange, erotic reality in which he is a sex submissive to Master Wayne. Sometimes, in this alternate reality, he is not himself, but rather Kelly, a female sex submissive. Once or twice, he is even other people, but regardless of who he is in his alternate reality, no one in this reality ever believes him. Everyone thinks he is delusional. The doctors think he somehow injures himself, so he regularly ends up on the psych ward with the rest of the crazies. The one thing which keeps him sane in the midst of this craziness, at least in his own mind, is his firm belief that the rest of the world has their reality, and he has his. This book comes from the author’s own struggle with marginal Borderline Personality Disorder, which means that he is familiar with often times having his own reality that is not always the same as the rest of the world’s reality. None of the characters in the book, however, are real, either in this reality or any other.
Tales from the Psych Ward is eight episodes from the chaotic life of someone who has their own very erotic reality totally separate from the world’s reality. The teller of these tales regularly jumps from normal reality into his own strange, erotic reality in which he is a sex submissive to Master Wayne. Sometimes, in this alternate reality, he is not himself, but rather Kelly, a female sex submissive. Once or twice, he is even other people, but regardless of who he is in his alternate reality, no one in this reality ever believes him. Everyone thinks he is delusional. The doctors think he somehow injures himself, so he regularly ends up on the psych ward with the rest of the crazies. The one thing which keeps him sane in the midst of this craziness, at least in his own mind, is his firm belief that the rest of the world has their reality, and he has his. This book comes from the author’s own struggle with marginal Borderline Personality Disorder, which means that he is familiar with often times having his own reality that is not always the same as the rest of the world’s reality. None of the characters in the book, however, are real, either in this reality or any other.