Tony Peluso began having migraines as a child but developed headaches every day in the year 2000, which have persisted to the present day.
He has been living a life in and out of hospitals since he was a teenager. It is a portrait of a life so surreal it is hard to imagine. Words remain the only thing that can illuminate the invisible curse of chronic migraines, a disease for which the only diagnostic tool will only ever be a patient’s voice.
His disability covers the first quarter of the 21st century, and with it a unique Odyssey of failures, challenges, and changes in healthcare.
It is a book that took him 14 years to write and is a path that has led him to a philosophy he calls The White Tower.