Charly McKenna developed a life full of achievement and pleasure— a great job, a lovely house, and a seemingly wonderful marriage. There is a lot to be proud of here. Then everything changes. Charly enters a rehabilitation process which is very difficult and which uncertain. She worries about how she will regain even a semblance of order to her life. What she does not realize is that the answers to her most pressing questions and to the heartrending reality of her ordeal lie in her unfilled memory gaps. Time has certainly separated her from her prior life and in that instance has also created a very difficult puzzle. She is in the reconstructive process of piecing together her life, but how can the clearing of fact from the fog of her mental void be of benefit to her? The reality is that the more she collects the more confused she will be about her previous life. To be short, will she ever be free and at peace with her truth? This is a wonderful account of what is perhaps the most difficult human experience: to find peace with and within oneself. Disclaimer: You are viewing a summary of the content from the book, Brain Damage. The summary's contents are not poised to replace the original book. It is meant as a complement to enhance the reader's understanding.