Today is World Bipolar Day, so I thought I would share my journey to a diagnosis and beyond.

I grew up with the shadow of an absent, manic father. His condition was only ever brought up when I acted out of line, used as a way to explain what was "wrong" with me. By the time I was about ten, I was seeing psychiatric professionals and being told I had a "chemical imbalance."

Into my teen years, I knew something wasn't right. I had a lot of rage for no apparent reason. But my step-father decided there was nothing wrong with me and took me off my medication. That led to a dark spiral. I was thrown out of the house, experienced homelessness, and dropped out of school before eventually getting my GED and going to college. For a long time, I was just lost, drifting through a brief marriage and divorce by the time I was 20.

Everything shifted when I met my partner in my late 20s. Even when I was deeply upset and far from kind, she met me with patience and acceptance. She helped me advocate for myself, which led to a real diagnosis: Bipolar 1, characterized by extreme highs of mania and extreme lows. This period in my life I associate with learning empathy and kindness.

Having a name for what I was experiencing changed my life. For a long time, I carried a heavy shame about my diagnosis. It has taken me a decade to finally let that go. The diagnosis explained why I would obsess about some things and then drop them to move on to another subject. Because of my condition, I know a lot about a lot of things because at some point my attention latched on and would not let go of the subject for a while. For instance, I went to college for North American Indian History, but I can tell you a lot about Linux, computers, phones, and numerous other little things.

Since before Covid, I have been on numerous medications. Sometimes I would have to change because a medication was working ok, but I wasn't allowed to go past a limit. Other times, medications would give me terrible side effects, like psychosis.

I have been on my current medication, Seroquel, for about a year now, and it seems to be working well. I know that could change at any time, though, and this dance with different medications will probably go on for the rest of my life.

Typically, the thing that interrupts my mental health is a change to my insurance. It is hard enough for bipolar people to take medication regularly, but when you add interruptions to pharmacy and mental health benefits, it can make it extremely hard to get back into a habit after being knocked out of it. Some of my lowest moments have been when I have lost my healthcare because of an inability to keep a job (due to the illness) and not being able to afford refills or doctor visits.

I tell you all of this hoping that you understand that people aren't just "crazy" and bipolar is not an adjective. Good people are born with and develop these conditions in our brains. No one really completely understands it. The best thing you can ever do for another person is to show them kindness and love. And to anyone out there who is still lost in the dark or struggling with a new diagnosis: your life isn't over. It takes work, and it can be exhausting, but it is absolutely possible to build a beautiful, meaningful life.

#WorldBipolarDay #BipolarDisorder #MentalHealthAwareness #EndTheStigma #Bipolar1 #MentalHealth #ActuallyBipolar #MentalIllness #MentalHealthMatters

Chat-Kommunikation als Mittel zur Stressreduktion bei emotionalen, wichtigen Gesprächen zwischen reizfilterschwachen Individuen, auch einfach völlig unterschätzt. Manchmal sogar im gleichen Raum!

Hilft uns hier SO sehr!!!

#actuallyAutistic #actuallyADHD #actuallyBipolar

many on this road know the drill:

halt and/or catch fire. come to rest. reboot. start again.

me, I don't know what I am. I've got an eval scheduled to take another crack at that question.

but if I do get my shit together, I'm still committed to @surfhosting (the selfhosting while couchsurfing guide) for ne'er-do-wells trying to be a dev while homeless. I know you're out there.

#actuallyADHD #actuallyASD #actuallyAutistic #actuallyBipolar #actuallySTPD #actuallySchizophrenic

Sometimes I feel guilty for having #ActuallyBipolar in my profile because nothing ever happens anymore but now a lot of the warning signs for #hypomania and a very slight #psychosis are showing up. I have doubts that this is the correct way to interpret what's happening anymore and I'm exploring that but it's basically the same thing that always happens anyway.

Don't worry. I have a concrete plan and support who has been alerted already.

(1/n)

#bipolar #mentalhealth #mentalillness

Actually I should #bipolar #actuallybipolar this

I work so hard on my mental health and no matter what I do I always end up back in this place

It’s hard not to feel like bipolar episodes are a personal failing, like I did something wrong to make it happen, even though I would never think that of anyone else.

Fuck bipolar disorder. #actuallybipolar #actuallymanic

#introduction

Hi!!!
Made it here to mastodon thanks to @makegodgayagain 😊

My name is Josie, I’m a 26yo trans woman (she/her) working in mental healthcare. Got an MSW focusing on adolescent therapy & eating disorders.
I’m pan, #actuallybipolar, living with chronic illness and channeling big clam energy by turning calcium into rocks.
I’m interested in: anarchism, cooking, creating art, fabrication, games of all sorts, gumbo, laser/leather work, and learning!
Lets be friends!