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The Myth of Normal

Gabor Maté, Daniel Maté

The Myth of Normal: Trauma, Illness, and Healing in a Toxic Culture

Gabor Maté, Daniel Maté

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The Myth of Normal Author Context

Gabor Maté

Gabor Maté is a physician, public intellectual, and author known for his work on addiction, trauma, and mind-body health. Drawing from decades of clinical practice, particularly in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, where he treated individuals with substance use disorders, Maté has developed a biopsychosocial approach that integrates neuroscience, psychology, and social critique. The Myth of Normal, co-authored with his son Daniel Maté, synthesizes his long-standing concerns with the limits of Western medicine and the cultural roots of chronic illness. His personal experience with childhood trauma—his maternal grandparents were killed in the Holocaust, and he was briefly placed in foster care as an infant to save his life—informs his understanding of emotional repression, attachment, and disease.

Although Maté is a licensed medical doctor, his work often ventures beyond conventional clinical boundaries into philosophical, cultural, and even spiritual domains. This interdisciplinary approach has made his work accessible and resonant for many readers, but it also invites criticism from those who prioritize empirical rigor and diagnostic clarity. Critics may view his sweeping generalizations—linking autoimmune disease to repressed emotions or blaming blurred text

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