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This bipolar life
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Are your moods are like an elevator with no control buttons? Mine are.
Ground floor ... I feel normal, content, just quietly getting on with ordinary, everyday life, loving my family and friends. This is as it should be. And maybe there's nothing wrong with me after all. Live.
Going up, top floor. Oh look! There's a shiny thing! I want to sing! Let's go buy stuff! Let's have a big party and invite the world! What could possibly go wrong! Woooooo hoooooooo! Play.
Going up (a different day) top floor. What do you mean you don't agree with me! I'm right! Why don't you think like me? Keep up! How can you be so illogical? I'll f-ing shred you if you don't do what I want! Rage.
Going down, lower ground floor. Flat, listless, can't be bothered. Can still function but it's a drag. Cope
Going down, basement. I'm never getting out of bed again. I'm useless, worthless. Total idiot, how could I ever imagine I could do anything, nothing ever goes right because I'm wrong. I'm a burden to everyone. Hide.
Welcome to my bipolar world. It's always been my world, but it's only recently I've seen it for what it is. About 15 years ago I was diagnosed with clinical depression during one of my 'basement' times. I had a lot of lower ground floor times too, on and off, and I kept out of the basement (so I thought) with alcohol. Until that took me into the blackest ever basement with only one obvious way out. Having survived doing something very dangerous I realised I had to stop drinking or I really would die.
I never took much notice of the playful times or the anger, that was just me, I was fun sometimes, and sometimes I was a devastating bitch. Ha! Deal with it people!
Well, yes, but in time the elevator started going up and down too quickly and, as I became more aware and more knowledgeable about mental health I realised this wasn't good. Doctor. Diagnosis. Bipolar 2. Lithium.
So, I've started this thread in the hope that other bipolar folks will join me, to share experiences and strategies. In my 'beginners' understanding, we are different from other fellow travellers of the back dog. While we experience depression as many others on this site do, the hypomanic or manic ups and, for some the rapid cycling that can happen, are experiences unto themselves.
I want to learn more, and I want to share with others. I hope my fellow elevators will join me here.
BTW, it's a ground floor day in my head today! Yay!
Love
Kaz
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Don’t know what it is Velvet. A constant need that is never fulfilled maybe.Years ago it was ADHd diagnosis and a number of years ago BP1 . I probably like you have always used excercise for all its benefits. I’m a bit flat as I’m not progressing as well as I think.
I’m not one to think there is good in everyone. Some nasty pasties out there and the legal system is NQR. Just my thoughts anyway
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Enjoying reading everyone's thoughts. I remember once being manic and seeing all humans as celestial creatures, I can't feel what I did but I can't forget either. I think, your all over the shop = means WoW girl your on fire. Hypocrites are gas lighting crazy makers, run run run run.
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looking for distractions, Its been a most difficult morning. My Fathers dementia is bad, I took him to a ceremony. It wasn't as bad as last December when my Father lost his footing at my Mothers grave hole. This morning Father said some awful things and the men around us didn't move a muscle. Father does not know who I am, he calls me 'the bloody mother in law', I guess I look like my Mother's, Mum. So glad to get this difficult experience off my chest.
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Laundrylady
I can relate to having a parent with dementia. Mymensingh died over 2Oyears ago snd for last ten years of her life she had demntis. she would have catrostroohic outburst where she would verbally abuse people the forget. It was hard to watch and hard to be the person she was verbally attacking. One of her grand chi,dren said they would have liked to know her when was a kind person. Broke my heart to hear thst.
at least today there is more understanding and support.I hope you get both support and kindness from others. It can be so daring exhausting but also at times rewarding.
take care
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My mother has dementia and passed away 10 years ago. At one stage her personality changed completely, outbursts . Such a cruel disease.
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Yesterday I was all aches, old and recent ailments together came on and it was a downer. Pain is a doorway to bipolar for me. Pain makes me feel sorry for my self and I can seem child like, which is crushing and I cant stop the melodrama till the pain backs off. My better half is awesome, he understands and makes things better. Sorry to read others and their families have experienced dementia and death and loss. I had been estranged from my parents for the last 12 years, when my Mothers died suddenly then, I found out that my Father has dementia. Father is now the polar opposite and I like him for the first time in my life.
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Airies my mum was always a bit challenging but never mean and unkind.
Laundrlsdyv, I am pleased yiu have a support partner. Mine wants to fix my pain and when he can’t he just gets angry at me which doesn’t help my pain. I never though about pain being a doorway. I have bad chronic pain on and off for over 30 years. In past few months it has been worse . It does make me tired and teary and fragile.
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Hi Quirky
Many men are "fixers", they get frustrated when they cant protect their family members from any threat including pain. What a man needs when he cant fix something is reassurance from his partner that his effort is appreciated. In some ways we men are children and need that pat on the head so to speak. It's the way we are wired.
The origins of these sort of behaviours can be as far back as caveman days. Man goes out to hunt using his muscles and skills to feed his family against savage animals. He returns home to protect his family while his wife cooks and nurtures. If there is a problem in the cave he will fix it. If he cant his anger explodes.
His wife is the soother, his reassurance he is doing the best he can. If such reassurance doesnt arrive he feels worthless ...
TonyWK
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Like Laundry Lady I get child like when I’m psychical pain, one of my kids thinks it’s amusing. They go so far as to call me baby.
We had a death in the family, an expected one but still it crushed me. I’m a bit better now. We have the funeral soon, I’m hoping I don’t have huge emotional outbursts. I find that my emotions are more than others. I don’t just cry, I sob. What I’m really hoping is that extended family don’t come looking for a handout as I have to deal with the Will.
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Hi asdff
Had that WILL business couple years ago. In the end we just left it to the solicitor to iron out. Thats what they are paid to do. All the best
TonyWK