A deliciously insightful quote by psychologist Ronald David Laing, who specialized in schizophrenia. The full text of the quote is:
Insanity sometimes is the sane response to a mad society; insanity need not always be a breakdown; it can also be a breakthrough!
What's really strange is that, as time goes on, I find more frequent and better examples of this principle.

Furthermore, Holden Caulfield delivers his monologue, in the form of the text to The Catcher in the Rye, from an undisclosed institution. Hamlet was a loon. Ditto for Hemmingway, Blake, Shelley, Neitzsche, and just about every other great author, musician, or painter admired by history.

But if these examples prove anything, it's that

1. Truly great art reflects all ranges of human emotion and is never afraid to take honest emotional risks,

2. In general, genius is revealed by adversity and cloaked by prosperity,

and

3. Sometimes you have to be a little bit crazy anyway in order to be honest.

In general, men who confront self-doubt and serious emotional challenge emerge much stronger than those who do not. Sometimes you have to walk through hell to get to heaven. There is a fine line between saints and madmen.