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Find us again! Moodletter provides information, hope and help to people living with depression, anxiety or bipolar disorder and those who care for them. ©2006-2011 Deborah Wiig
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What’s me and what’s my illness? Understanding yourself when you’ve been diagnosed with bipolar disorder |
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You’ve always thought of yourself as creative, productive and sociable. Now that you’ve been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, you wonder how many of the qualities that made up “you” are symptoms of your disorder. Where do you stop and the disorder begin? “Were my periods of high energy, creativity and accomplishment nothing more than signs of an illness?” you might ask yourself, says David J. Miklowitz, PhD in The Bipolar Disorder Survival Guide. “How much mood variability am I ‘allowed’ before people think I’m getting sick again?” It feels now that it’s all about your illness. You may wonder when you’re happy if it’s a sign you’re becoming manic or if when you’re sad it means you’re depressed. But your feelings might be the same as those other people experience. It’s important to separate your personality, habits and attitudes from your symptoms, says Miklowitz. Being especially energetic for several days may not be a symptom, but not being able to sleep for several nights may be. Compare your personality traits to the symptoms you have when you’re manic or depressed. It may help to ask those close to you what they observe, he says. Here are some examples from The Bipolar Disorder Survival Guide:
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Many people with bipolar disorder, productive people with successful relationships, accept their need to take medications and have developed strategies for managing life’s stresses, he says.
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Sections of this article were excerpted from The Bipolar Disorder Survival Guide by David J. Miklowitz (2002) with permission from Guilford Press. Page updated January 1, 2011 |
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