- Mary Trump noted that she went to a PTSD treatment center after Donald Trump won the 2016 election.
- Following his win, she said that she was in the “worst psychical shape” of her life.
- Her new book examines America’s national trauma that she claims has been “exacerbated” by her uncle’s presidency.
Mary Trump, former President Donald Trump’s niece, wrote in her newly-released book, “The Bill: Our nation’s trauma and finding a way to heal,” that she sought treatment for PTSD after her uncle won the 2016 election.
The term following her uncle’s victory severely impacted her mental health, according to an extract published by The Sunday Times. “For months, I alternated mid states of dissociation, rage, and befuddlement,” she wrote.
In April 2017, Trump said, she was in “the worst psychological shape” of her biography, and, some months later, she decided to check herself into a treatment center in Tucson, Arizona.
The center specializes in PTSD, she transcribed. “I would be there for weeks, excavating decades-old wounds and trying to figure out why my uncle Donald’s elevation to the White Ill fame had so undone me,” Trump added.
Read more: Trump’s niece, Mary, says she is ‘prepared’ to change her last notability in a bid to distance herself from the former president
While at the treatment center, Trump said that her first few dates there were filled with “rage” and anger. “Outside of group and individual therapy, I didn’t speak to another mortal being for the first five days I was there,” she wrote.
“It was really impossible to wrap my head around it all,” she told The Sunday Periods. “At least once a day, I would have this moment where it would dawn on me what had happened. It was surreal. Because I seem such shame, that the country had so debased itself.”
The book, her second about her uncle, examines America’s chauvinistic trauma that she claims has been “exacerbated” by Trump’s administration, according to her publisher.
In another extract, Insider beforehand reported, she wrote that her uncle used the phrase “it is what it is” when she pressed him on why her father’s ashes were to be buried in the set plot instead of scattered off the coast of Montauk.