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Topic : Bipolar Disorder

Number of Replies: 6639
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Created on : Thursday, July 07, 2005, 08:57:16 am
Author : dataimport

Patients suffering from Bipolar disorder face many difficult challenges. Share your story and get support from those who understand.

 

If you believe you need immediate assistance, please call your local emergency number or crisis hotline listed in your local phone book's government pages. You can also find more help on our General and Mental Health Resources page


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January 7, 2008, 10:21 am PST

Montel

Quote From: sendmeoses_us

This is why I have found myself not watching the television for the fact that not all the correct information is not given out, so here I am on Doctor Phil's place, where I know there is a collective group of doctors, as well as patience that know the facts, and know that not all of the facts are the same for everyone. Besides, it saves on the cable bill.

 

Regina Rea

You are right, a brain dysfunction like bipolar disease cannot be cured by diet. It is good to have a proper diet, exercise & vitamins. I take folic acid, which helps b/c the brain can get depleted of B vitamins when in a manic phase. But I have to take Depakote & seroquel or I never sleep. Montel may have very mild manias, as some people do. But for the rest of us with very serious levels of this disease, do not believe in any "quick cures."
 
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January 7, 2008, 10:26 am PST

Meds

Quote From: mustbecrazy

My husband has been very understanding and patient...whether I deserve it or not.  We have been married almost 27 years.

 

It might be helpful for your husband to read up on bipolar disorder.  There are a lot of helpful web sites...the most helpful one that I have found is www.nami.org  

 

If your husband has the info needed, he might better understand your illness. There is a lot he can do for you...just being there...giving you support and hugs.

 

My husband is my barometer...often, he recognizes the manic phase before I do...it's just too much fun being slightly manic...but expensive too...I tend to spend too much when I am manic.  When I am depressed, he is there to encourage me...he knows that he can't "pull" me out of the depression, but he understands what is going on, and that helps a lot.

 

When I am experiencing changing moods, or swining too far one way or the other, I have the flexibility to adjust my meds, within limits.  If things get too far out of hand, I will contact my doctor, and we can talk about a plan to manage the symptoms.

 

I would encourage you to bring your husband to one or two of your apointments with your doctor...your doc might have some insight to give to your husband, and might have some suggestions of supporting you and your changing moods.  It might give him an outlet for his hurting, and he may feel that he is helping you more, therefore feeling better about the situation.

 

I hope this is helpful to you....Becky

Each person needs a specific med/s. I cannot take Risperidal but it works for others (makes me very hyper). Ambien kept me awake! So do talk with your MD/psych & make sure s/he knows all the symptoms you are experiencing. Most meds take 4-8 weeks to settle into your system but if you are having bad reactions (super mania or suicidal thoughts), call your doctor immediately! My husband went with me to the first 3 appointments & that helped him a lot.  A good book for him to read would be Patty Duke's "A Brilliant Madness," her own story of dealing with bipolar disease.  You will do well!
 
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January 7, 2008, 10:28 am PST

Psychotic symptoms

Quote From: tammyo1973

Not sure about this... BUT wanted to say welcome back and WOOHOO... I was having withdrawls ;)

Hopefully tomorrow will be busy and we can all get to know each other again.

For now I think we need to re-do our BIO's like EM asked us to do a while back...

 

MINE:

Tammy, 31 mom of 2

14 yr old daughter, Emily bp, ptsd, gad. Is ok but wondering if she is cycling into depression, she is having a lot of psychotic symptoms or just not use to being alone. We will call pdoc monday and ask.

 

3 yr old daughter, Logan, who is normal but today was going 100 miles a minute. She scares me because I over annalyze everything she does.

 

My hubby is wonderful works all the time so I don't :)

 

My bestfriends are theones I have made here.

Love ya'll

Talk tomorrow

Lots of hugs and love TaM

Often, a person in high mania will experience hallucinations, etc.  This is from lack of sleep & also from deprivation of folic acid to the brain. Your daughter should be on a good combination of medications which specifically work for teenagers.  Meds have different effects on teens than on adults. I take seroquel for good sleep, to ward off psychosis. Best of luck to you! You are a caring Mom
 
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January 7, 2008, 5:45 pm PST

meds

Quote From: dixie88

Each person needs a specific med/s. I cannot take Risperidal but it works for others (makes me very hyper). Ambien kept me awake! So do talk with your MD/psych & make sure s/he knows all the symptoms you are experiencing. Most meds take 4-8 weeks to settle into your system but if you are having bad reactions (super mania or suicidal thoughts), call your doctor immediately! My husband went with me to the first 3 appointments & that helped him a lot.  A good book for him to read would be Patty Duke's "A Brilliant Madness," her own story of dealing with bipolar disease.  You will do well!

I am currently on Lamictal, Abilify, and Temazepam.  I've had a lot of past meds that I couldn't tolerate for one reason or another.  I have been on my current med combo for a couple of years now, and it is the best combo I have ever had.  Some meds left me emotionally dead...my current meds let me have feelings without the extremes.

 

I agree that different people react differently to different drugs.  It is wonderful that there is such a wide range of choices for meds...if one combo doesn't work, different drugs can be tried.  It does take awhile to find the combination that is right, but it is worth the effort.

 

I haven't read that book...I think I'll go to the library and check it out....I was diagnosed with bipolar in 1995, after a previous wrong diagnosis of depression, and subsequent WRONG meds that made it worse for 5 years...the doctors just would't believe me that the drugs were doing more harm than good...now that I am on the RIGHT meds, I'm doing fine. (I've had bipolar all my life, but it went undiagnosed).

 

Another book that you might want to find is "Salt and Sugar" by Jane Thompson.  It is her personal account of her struggle with bipolar disorder and how she got her life back.

 

Becky

 
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January 7, 2008, 6:01 pm PST

you need a break once in awhile

Quote From: mothertoason

i am a stay at home mother to my 18 month old son. my husband works 40+ a week, and i have no family or friends in this city. i have a family history of depression, as well as a personal history of depression and anxiety. i am a survivor of sexual abuse, and have had a very very difficult time coping with various other hardships and losses in my life. i do not have insurance, hopefully my husband's company will provide our family with it this year, but my problem is this: i cannot cope. before we had my son, i was a fully functioning alcoholic, as a form of self-medication.  now i do not drink at all. i have no desire to. but i am really the only person raising our son, since we can't afford help, or pre-school. i find myself coming in and out of depressive states, and fight panic/anxiety attacks on a daily basis (dealing w/ a toddler, you can only imagine why). i would love to seen a phychiatrist, therapist, or anyone that would even be able to help me with pX meds to maintain a healthy balance - but i can't afford it.  i don't know what to do, and i'm starting to have more days of feeling imbalanced. i can't stand for my son to see me this way, and many times i leave him in his crib so i can go into my room and cry. please someone. i need advice. i love my family and am otherwise healthy and happy, but there's just too many triggers now, and i can't control them all. i have no help, and feel SO alone. any advice is appreciated.

For the money problems, you might try social services, or try applying for Social Security Disability, then you can get Medicare for yourself.

 

Congratulations on quitting drinking...keep up the good work.

 

As a mom of three boys, I know the stress of raising kids...the toddler stage is difficult...they are so active, and so obstinant.  Just wait until they get to be teens...

 

For a doctor right now, try going to your local community mental health center...call the hospital if you don't know where to find it...they'll direct you.  The community mental health center will use a sliding fee scale, so you only pay what you can afford, and they can link you with the drug companies to get your meds for free, or nearly free.  Don't go it alone.

 

As far as getting a break...I understand about not having family or friends around...my family all live three hours away, and I still don't have any close friends.  BUT you need some time with adults to keep yourself sane.  Try joining a local MOPS (Mothers Of Pre-Schoolers) group...they meet all over the US, and they are usually linked with churches.  They wouldn't be in the phone book, but you could call some churches and find out where and when they meet.  I was in MOPS for a number of years, and it was really helpful to be around other moms of toddlers.  They have babysitters there, so you can meet with the moms and take a break from your child. 

 

I've been in the deep depressive state where I couldn't even move...Don't let yourself get there or stay there...you need to reach out...contact the community mental health center, and get involved in a group where you can meet with other people...I've also been the route of anxiety attacks so bad that I thought I was having a heart attack...again, get some medical help...you can't afford not to.

 

Another option is to check for a local chapter of NAMI (check www.nami.org for a local chapter).  They have regular support group meetings for people with different mental illnesses.  There is a local chapter near our home, and they have a support group just for people with bipolar disorder.

 

You owe it to yourself and your child and husband to get some help...meds make a huge difference for me, and I know that they can for you too.

 

Take care, Becky

 
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January 7, 2008, 8:49 pm PST

A CRY OUT

my son is 7y w/bipolar-ADHD he is out of control we can't get him help he maybe only 7y but some of the things he does would scare or shock most i had to call the police 2-days ago we do get him help at the local MHMR  med's, counseling, the whole 9-yards iam at a point were i see no hope he needs long=term placement the state won't pay {He gets ssi } I looked also paying out pocket UH-NO $2500 month the worst part is i have cancer my life now is borrow time most of it because i can't get treatment on time there is no one elas to take care of him & he is a VERY hard child to mannage at least once a month we have to put him {mental hospital} there a 5-10 day program i want to help him in every way i give 1000% every day there has to be an answer some where some how if we don't find it fast i won't be here to help,support,him when he needs most  {thank all of you who takes time out to hear a mom crying out}

 

 
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January 8, 2008, 4:28 pm PST

Olanzapine Tablets

Hi Everyone from New Zealand!

 

I am a surviviour of bipolar disorder and have been on meds for quite some time. My question is I have been on olanzapine for over a year now but i am starting to get dizzy spells after I have taken my dose at night. Is there anything out there that I could use that we could get here in NZ that helps?

 

Thanks

Sandy Dickinson

Wellington NZ

 
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January 8, 2008, 7:42 pm PST

Love your son, That is all that counts

Quote From: rhammett

  

As of this 22nd day of July 2005, I feel like I am living in tormented hell.  My son just celebrated his 20th birthday and has been suffering with a mentall illness since a diagnosis in October 2004.  In October, I received a phone call that my son was at his deceased grandmother’s house, and my son was very incoherent and threatening suicide. Her house is located in Alabama, I live in Georgia. I knew that I would not be able to handle my son since he is 6’2 and 275 lbs. My husband and brother went to him to try to calm him down.  I went to find an Alabama Judge to get committal papers since I didn’t know what else to do to try to save him.  The judge sent two deputies with me to rescue my son.  The deputies transported my son to an outpatient mental clinic in Alabama. 

  

The Alabama mental health clinic believed that my son was on drugs so they recommended that I send him to a rehabilitation clinic in Montgomery, Alabama.  Unfortunately, they were not able to take him until the following morning.  The Alabama outpatient clinic sent him home with me and my brother. 

 

 

The later in the day it became, the more my son exhibited bizarre and erratic behavior.  He was out of control.  He was hallucinating and talking out of his head about the devil and hell.  He even put his hand around my neck because he thought he saw foam spewing from my mouth. It scared me because I thought he was going to choke me.  I called the rehabilitation after-hours clinic many times to ask for advice but to no avail. Frantically, I called for other family members to come and help.  There were five family members trying to handle him.   Eventually, he walked out of the house and started knocking on my neighbor’s doors in the middle of the night and walking up and down the road with all of us in tow trying to get him to return to the house. Reluctantly, I had to call 911 for his safety and everyone else’s safety. 

 

 

It was difficult to convince the sheriff’s department in Georgia to do anything because they refused to recognize the legal papers from the Alabama judge.  Eventually, my son started acting bizarre again.  It was then that the deputies decided to take him to the emergency room for me.  My son was so out of control that it took five grown men to subdue him to give him sedation.  It was distressing for to me to watch them have to subdue him.  It broke my heart.

 

 

My son received a four-week treatment at a mental health hospital October – November 2004.    Bipolar manic/depressive disorder was the diagnosis given by the doctor.

 

 

When my son was released from the hospital, I brought him home with me, against my husband’s wishes.  The plan was for him to work with my husband part-time and go to a secondary school part-time to learn a trade.  He was very bitter to me because I had put him in the mental hospital. He treated me with disrespect and rudeness.  This plagued my husband even more. The four months that my son lived with us caused tremendous strain on my marriage.  But, I begged my husband to just bear with it for me. I felt I had to help my son in every way I could.  I had to have peace within myself so that I could lay my head down at night knowing that I did my very best.  Then on March 18, 2005, he just left without saying anything to me or my husband.  I was able to locate his girlfriend but she was very aloof. At that point, I decided to try to let go of "mother-henning" him.  However, on several occasions I tried to reach my son to see how he was doing, but he refused to return my calls. 

 

 

On May 7, 2005, at 9:15 a.m., I received a phone call from his cousin and aunt from his paternal side of the family which also lives in Alabama. They told me that my son was there at their house and was out of his mind.  He told them that he had killed his girlfriend and she was under the steps at his trailer. I asked them to please go and check and call me back as soon as possible. I was paralyzed with fear. His cousin did call back within about 30 minutes and informed me the girlfriend was okay.  They also informed me that my son was still at their house still acting bizarre.  I told them that if they couldn’t handle him that I certainly couldn’t.  I asked them to call the sheriff; I thought that if he was on drugs that he would dry out in a day or so. The next thing I knew was his cousin was putting him out in my driveway which was about an hour later.  I knew once I saw him that I was in for a rough ride.

 

 

We were having my husband’s birthday party that day with about 12 guests attending.  Everyone observed my son’s erratic behavior. I kept trying to encourage my son to take a shower and just try to take a nap. He refused or could not comprehend anything being said to him.  Reluctantly, each of my guests tried to calmly talk him into to eating or taking a nap.  Fortunately, everyone remained very calm, but we were very uneasy because we anticipated that this was a very volatile situation. 

 

 

Finally, he was persuaded to eat a bite or two of food coming off the grill. Then for no appearant reason he became very agitated.  He started talking about suicide and talking out of his mind.  It quickly became a very frightening situation.  Shockingly, the next thing he did was take a steak knife and start cutting on himself, up and down his chest, caressing the knife and talking to the knife.  Everyone became panic-stricken because we didn’t know what his next move would be.  We tried to convince him to give someone the knife, but that only made him more infuriated.  He commenced to get into my in-ground swimming pool with the knife while simultaneously ranting and raving at everyone.  At this point, I told him that if he didn’t give me the knife and get out of the swimming pool that I would be forced to call 911.  He just yelled for me to go ahead.  He wasn’t scared.  I begged him not to make me call the police.  I had no other choice.  I made the call to 911 and told them to please send an officer that my son had a knife and had been threatening suicide.  They advised me that help was on the way.

 

 

I went to the front yard to wait for the officers to arrive. While I was waiting, I heard a lot of commotion going on in the pool area.  I ran to back yard to discover that my husband was now in the pool with my son and he was irate. My son had taken the knife and started puncturing the vinyl in the bottom of the pool. He had punctured about 25 or 30 holes in the bottom of the pool.  My husband was trying to stop him then my son turned and slashed the side of the pool.  My husband’s anger quickly escalated out of control; especially, since he and I just put this swimming pool in last year with the majority of the work done by ourselves.   My husband picked up a wooden stick from the side of the flower bed to defend his self while simultaneously forcing my son up the steps and out of the pool.  I was running toward them as fast as I could so I could try to intervene and keep my husband or my son from getting hurt or worse.  I had never seen my husband so angry.  Moreover, I knew in my gut that if my husband were to have stricken him with the wooden stick, it would have intensified the situation with someone receiving an injury or worse. 

 

 

Without hesitation, I jumped in between my husband and my son while begging them to please stop.  At that instant, my son grabbed me by my neck and held the knife to me. My husband and friends were terrified that my son was going to kill me.  Everyone was pleading with my son not to hurt me. My son dragged me to the back door of the house. I was pleading with him not to hurt me. I kept asking him why, but he never responded.  I kept telling him how much I loved him, but as I looked into his eyes, I realized that there was nobody there.  He just had a blank and evil stare.  During all of this chaos, my friends had already called 911 again.  They expressed to 911 that the situation had become a matter or life or death for me.  As my son tried to pull me into the house, I told him that if he was going to kill me that he would do it with everyone watching. I was terrified and feared for my life. Suddenly, a rush of adrenaline overcame me which allowed me to escape from his grasp.  My son then barricaded himself in the house.

 

 

The sheriff’s department deputies were starting to arrive on the scene by this time.  There were at least eight deputies that had surrounded my house with their weapons drawn.  I could hear my son in the den talking to himself, but he refused to open the door for anyone.  I was frantic.  It felt as if I was in a nightmare and couldn’t wake up.  I was crying and begging the officers not to kill my baby.  I felt so powerless.  Fortunately, my husband found a spare key to the front door; this prevented the officers from breaking down my double glass doors.  Fully armed, the officers rushed the front door.  I could hear sounds of scuffling, and the officers yelling at him to get his hands behind his back and get down on the floor. 

 

 

The pain I felt in my soul was excruciating and unbearable.  Time was at a stand still. I was expecting the officers to bring him out the door in handcuffs. I was more shocked when the ambulance arrived.  I knew then that something was terribly wrong.  I was almost hysterical.  Subsequently one of the officers opened the door for the paramedics, affording the opportunity to force my way through the door to see what was happening with my son.  That image will haunt me for the rest of my life.  My son was lying on the floor in a huge puddle of blood.  He appeared to be dead.  I was traumatized and almost physically collapsed. 

 

 

One of the officers quickly approached me and informed me that they tazered him six times, with three of them being with a dry tazer. They elucidated that my son had stabbed himself in the chest and had almost bitten off his thumb completely.  The paramedics transported my son to the hospital and from there he went to jail.

 

 

This incident resulted in criminal charges against my son for aggravated assault and criminal damage to property.  My son remained in jail under a $30,000 bond for two months. During his tenure in jail, I visited weekly.  It anguished me to have to see my son in jail.

 

 

Many people ridiculed me and told me what a fool I was to go to the jail, most especially my husband.  My husband consistently forbade me to go, but I was compelled to go anyway. Even though my heart was crushed, I still wanted to reach out to help him. But my analytical thinking told me he must be accountable for his actions and suffer the consequences.  To this very day, my husband is still disconcerted by my son’s terrorist actions against me.  My husband says he will never forgive or forget the actions of my son that day.  I truly understand my husband's view point.  I know that my husband loves me and is only trying to protect me.

 

 

On July 7, 2005, I received a phone call from the jail stating that my son was in suicide watch.  I couldn’t take it any longer.  Against my husband’s wishes, I made bail for my son to await trial.  It was at that time, when I realized that my son was sicker than I had ever comprehended. 

 

 

On the same day that my son was released on bond, my family and I sought medical help from a local hospital as well as a psychiatrist from Atlanta. The doctor also stated that it had been in my son's best interest that I got him out of jail and sought medical treatment for him immediately.  The doctors quickly determined that my son was experiencing severe stages of schizophrenia that encompassed grossly disorganized thoughts, paranoia as well as displaying catatonic behavior. Thankfully, there were no drugs in his system.

 

 

My son is currently receiving medical attention at hospital for the mentally ill.  I don’t know how long he will be there.  The doctors informed me that he is at a great risk for suicide. Especially, when he is first released, and that he will need someone with him at all times until he stabilizes.  Additionally, to compound this whole horrific matter, I just discovered that he has a baby due October 8, 2005.  This is my first grandchild.

 

 

I humbly and respectfully addressed the district attorney with a request to dismiss criminal charges against my son contingent upon mandatory mental help for my son, so that he may have a chance at a prospering and productive life.  I don’t know what the outcome is at this juncture.

 

 

I would like some kind of advice of how to carry on with my own life.  I know my son is very sick.   Moreover, I am very scared of him when he is not in his right mind.  I am the first person that he lashes out against.  He believes that every time that he has come to me for help, I have had him constrained either by hospital or jail.  I only do this to protect him from his self and others in his path. I refuse to turn my back on him while he is sick, but I feel helpless because I don’t know what to do. 

 

 

As I mentioned, my husband is against anything that has to do with my son.  I reiterate that I do understand and respect my husband’s feelings which I have conveyed to him on numerous times. Nevertheless, my husband's verbal and mental abuse he inflicts upon me only magnifies the stress that I am enduring.  My husband threatens to leave me and refuses to put any money in the bank to pay bills.  He believes that this will ensure that none of his money will be spent on my son.

 

 

I love my husband, and I love my son with all of my heart and soul.  This is the most difficult position I have ever had to experience.  I am caught in the middle of this chaos between my husband and my son. This rips me apart, and makes me literally physically ill. If my son did this to himself by doing drugs, it would be much easier for me to step back, but that is not at all the case.  He is sick with this schizophrenia mental illness, and I just can’t turn my back on him.  I am his mother, and if he can’t count on me for help, who can he count on?

 

 

Please help.  My life is a disaster. I feel that I am on a railroad track watching the train come straight for me, but I can not get off the track.  I am under so much pressure that I know I am spiraling toward a disaster myself.  I have health problems myself, and I am concerned that all of this stress is going to make me have a meltdown or even possibly a heart attack.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I believe you are a great mother.  I am having many problems with my son also.  He is in jail right now.  I went to court this morning with my parents.  A court order was put on him to take his medicine.  He is also to have house arrest.  He will be randomly drug and alcohol tested and be monitored with an ankle bracelet.  I am in fear that he will break the order and not want to take his meds again.  He is in serious trouble right now and I hope to God that he does what the judge has ordered him to do.  I feel for you.  Maybe a court order to take his meds and see his doctor on a regular basis is the best thing you could get done for your son.  Please let me know how things go.  I will pray for you.
 
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January 8, 2008, 9:39 pm PST

There is hope!!!

hi everyone,

I was diagnosed with bipolar disorder as a teenager.  Each year for about ten years I would have extreme episodes of major highs and lows.  I was hospitlized many times.  For the past ten years, I have been stable.  I am now in my thirties. I take my medication faithfully and see my doctor regularly. 

-torifaith

 
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January 9, 2008, 3:39 am PST

Really?

Quote From: torifaith

hi everyone,

I was diagnosed with bipolar disorder as a teenager.  Each year for about ten years I would have extreme episodes of major highs and lows.  I was hospitlized many times.  For the past ten years, I have been stable.  I am now in my thirties. I take my medication faithfully and see my doctor regularly. 

-torifaith

Reading your message makes me think....okay, that was the confirmation I was looking for! But somewhere in the back of my mind creeps this nasty feeling of 'no way'.

 

I've never been hospitalized; I have (at least that's whay they say), a Bipolair II disorder, meaning the stretch is on the depressive episodes and the highs are not that severe. I've been seeing doctors off and on for the last 10 years now, and up till 2 years ago they never even diagnosed me (they said I was too young). Now they've got me on Lithium and Tegretol, and you know what.....I'm not getting that much better. When I wasn't taking meds I would have (for instance) 6 good months and 6 extremely bad months....but in those good months I could do stuff: paint, write, go to college. Now....I can't do nothing. I'm always ill, and it seems like I've got 'a myst' in my head. And it annoys the hell out of me, I want to finish college, I want to do stuff, I want to write (I know, I'm to impatient).

 

The doctor I'm seeing right now is a really good guy, so I've decided to stick with him for a little while longer. But if I'm truthfully....I'm already thinking about quiting the meds, and just....go with the flow. Maybe for just a while, until I've finished college.

 

But it's good to hear you're doing okay Torifaith, I'm really glad to hear that. I hope it will never change.

 

 

 
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