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Marie Curie
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==Illness == At age 15, having just graduated top of the class from her school, where she was taught in Russian and Polish was banned, she became ill with "fatigue", and was sent to her Uncle's home to recover in the countryside.<ref name="Curie">{{Cite book | title = Curie|isbn=978-1-904341-29-1|language=en | url =https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=43hsda5Sm6UC&lpg=PA59&pg=PA4#v=onepage | date = 2003 | publisher=Haus Publishing|last = Dry|first = Sarah | last2 = Seifert | first2 = Sabine}}</ref><ref name="A-Life">{{Cite book | title = Marie Curie: A Life|language=en | url =https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=WV2mDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT40&hl=en&sa=X#v=onepage | date = 2019-07-31|publisher=Plunkett Lake Press|last = Quinn | first = Susan}}</ref><ref name="Competence">{{Cite book | title = The Cost of Competence: Why Inequality Causes Depression, Eating Disorders, and Illness in Women|isbn=978-0-19-802344-9|language=en | url =https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=D4BdvAWOmCcC&pg=PA212&hl=en#v=onepage | date = 1995-08-17|publisher=Oxford University Press|last = Silverstein | first = Brett | last2 = Perlick | first2 = Deborah}}</ref> ===Collapsed due to fatigue=== Curie's studies were not affected by the death of her sister Zosia when she was nine, or her mother's death two years after, but on graduating school at 15 she was described as having "collapsed due to fatigue":<ref name="Curie" /> {{Quote|She refused to get out of bed and ate little. Instead, she wallowed in a dark room all day. Finally, Wladyslaw became worried about her. He decided to send her to live with relatives in the country. It turned out to be a magnificent decision. She began what would become the happiest, most perfect year of her life... she quickly regained her health and good spirits. She put aside her science books and read novels. She fished and picked wild strawberries with her cousins. They took long hikes, rolled hoops, and played games like tag and shuttlecock.<ref name="Great-Scientists">{{Cite book | title = Great Scientists| date = 2012 |isbn=978-81-223-1286-7|language=en | url =https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=o91dd5SQL9QC&pg=PT132&hl=en#v=onepage | first = Pustak |last = Mahal}}</ref>|source=Great Scientists (2012}} Curie herself wrote that her illness was caused by "the fatigue of growth and study". Her daughter Eve's biography states: "In the course of the mysterious passage called adolescence, while her body was transformed and her face grew finer, Manya [Marie's nickname] suddenly became lazy."<ref name="Competence" /> Another biography, by a "disinterested observer" states that she a history of anxiety, depression, and other nervous problems starting in her teenage years, and that doctors diagnosed her as suffering a "nervous breakdown."<ref name="Competence" /> ===Break from studying=== While recovering in the countryside, Marie Curie stopped all studying and intellectual pursuits, even giving up embroidery. It is not clear why, or if this was a result of [[cognitive dysfunction]] or [[concentration problems]] caused by her illness. She did not see this as negative, so so it may have been a choice rather than a sign of illness. {{cquote|text="I can't believe geometry or algebra ever existed. I have completely forgotten them," she writes,"... aside from an hour's French lesson with a little boy I don't do a thing, positively not a thing β for I have even abandoned the piece of embroidery that I had started... I have no schedule. I get up sometimes at ten o'clock, sometimes at four or five (morning, not evening!). I read no serious books, only harmless and absurd little novels... <br>Thus, in spite of the diploma conferring on me the dignity and maturity of a person who has finished her studies, I feel incredibly stupid. Sometimes I laugh all by myself, and I contemplate my state of total stupidity with genuine satisfaction."<ref name="A-Life"/> | author = Susan Quinn|source=Marie Curie: A Life | date = 2009}}
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