
(10-4-20) Dr. Lloyd I. Sederer has had an incredible career.
He’s been the Medical Director of a Harvard teaching hospital (McLean Hospital), spent five years as Mental Health Commissioner in New York City, another twelve years as Chief Medical Officer of New York State’s mental health agency and seven years as Medical Editor for Mental Health with the HuffPost.
He’s also been busy as an author, writing nearly a dozen books, including The Family Guide To Mental Health Care, and more than 350 professional articles.
His newest offering, Ink-Stained For Life: Coming of Age in the 1950s, A Bronx Tale, has Sederer looking inward through a series of essays at his younger years and lessons that he’s learned.
“I had no plan to write a memoir, though the itch to write has been in me since my adolescence,” Dr. Sederer noted. The seeds for his new book were planted after the New York Times published an OP Ed in 2010 that Dr. Sederer had written about his chore of putting editions of Sunday newspapers out for sale at his father’s stationary shop when he was a child. “The Times had retitled it (bless them), Ink-Stained for Life, a far better title than I had provided…On the Saturday it was published, I went out early and bought a lot of copies of the paper. So, I had one memoir story and decided to write some more. Thirteen to be specific, twelve new ones and one adapted from a piece I had published in the HuffPost.” (Read original Times essay here.)
I’ve learned much from Dr. Sederer, enjoyed when we have spoken, and appreciate his years of helping individuals with mental illnesses and their families – so I asked him to write about his new book, which I have not yet read, for my blog. I was especially interested in lessons he learned as a psychiatrist. He replied that his career choice was improbable because he was “as neurotic as could be…” as a child.Click to continue…




