Missing Me
A Memoir of Postpartum Psychosis and the Long Road Back
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- Pre-Order
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- Expected Mar 17, 2026
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
A stunning memoir by a writer and mental health advocate about motherhood, postpartum mental health, and finding ground when you lose all control.
When writer and blogger Ayana Lage became pregnant, she prepared as any parent would: voraciously researching, Redditing, preparing for anything. And having experienced a previous miscarriage, she braced herself for the worst. But days after giving birth, Ayana’s sense of control began to break when God started speaking to her. After growing up Pentecostal and longing to hear from God, she heard him audibly for the first time—and often. God told her that she had been chosen. He told her that her daughter was the second coming of Jesus Christ. She carried around notebooks to ensure she didn't miss any divine words. Eventually, she was diagnosed with post-partum psychosis and sent to a psychiatric ward, unable to see loved ones or her baby and sometimes unsure whether she'd actually had a baby at all.
Her once-rational thought process was consumed with delusions, and overnight, the self-professing people-pleaser turned into a fearless charismatic, obeying what she believed to be God’s orders—including pulling the fire alarm to force an evacuation in the hospital—and shouting at anyone who disagreed with her. Slowly, the medication and treatment began to work, and when she was well enough to be released, the hard road to recovery began.
Ayana struggled to adjust to normal life after the breaks she endured—both the psychosis itself and the experience of feeling betrayed by her mind. Once a fierce mental health advocate, she still remained hesitant to share about psychosis, because of the stigma associated with this mental health disorder.
Drawing from Ayana’s notebooks and medical records, Missing Me is a gorgeously-written exploration of the revelations Ayana received during her psychotic episode, the surprising lessons about her life and faith revealed in the aftermath, and the long road to trusting her mind once again.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The unflinching debut from blogger Lage lays bare her struggles with mental illness, beginning with panic disorder and leading to postpartum psychosis. After she gave birth to her daughter in 2020 during the Covid-19 pandemic, Lage alternately elated and despaired over what she believed were God's messages to her. She stopped trusting her family and entered the hospital, where she filled notebooks with grandiose "prophecies" that her daughter was "the second coming of God," that hospital staff were running medical experiments on her, and that she was "God's favorite." Lage holds nothing back as she chronicles her long path to recovery, including the self-doubt and paranoia that crept in ("If I felt too excited, used too many exclamation points, or had a day filled with mood swings, did that mean it was happening again?"), and her fears that her second pregnancy would result in the same experience. Particularly vivid is the sense of violation the author felt over losing trust in her memory, her mind, and—for a time—in a faith that had failed to save her ("I dutifully take my antianxiety pills every night but sometimes imagine an alternate universe where God made my problems disappear"). This brave memoir does valuable work in dismantling the stigma of an often overlooked mental illness.