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Patient perspectives: bipolar disorder

Updated on October 25, 2024

In this discussion, four bipolar patients talk about when they knew it was time to seek help.

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Transcript

00:00
[SERIOUS MUSIC] You know, my mom started reading the pamphlets and she's like, oh my god, I always called you my Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde child.
00:06
And I was like, mom, that's like an analogy for bipolar disorder. But it just it just shows you that she had no idea. A game plan is so incredibly vital
00:15
because you can't fix what you're not trying to fix.
00:22
Even before your diagnosis, what things made you really think about, maybe something may be going on wrong here, and I may need to get some help.
00:31
My symptoms started when I was in sixth grade. And I remember waking up one morning and just not being able to get up.
00:39
I literally spent all day in bed completely in the darkness and realized there's something wrong with me,
00:46
but I don't know what it is. So I didn't think anything was wrong with me. I just thought I was a jerk. I mean, honestly, my family tried
00:54
to punish the symptoms of bipolar disorder out of me, right? So I just thought that I was having trouble--
01:01
I don't know-- being good. It never occurred to me that anything was wrong with me that wasn't my own doing until I ended up in a,
01:10
you know, I was committed to a psychiatric hospital. And then people started explaining to me, they're like, well, no, this is an illness.
01:17
This is part of a symptom. You have bipolar disorder. You need help. For the most part-- I mean, I've had waves of depression my entire life.
01:24
It was so overwhelming that I was just like, there is something really wrong here. Like, I need to start figuring this out.
01:30
So 2014 is when I started in therapy. But didn't get diagnosed until 2018. So I spent four years, like, doing this work of like,
01:39
OK, maybe it's these other trauma issues, when, yeah, it was that, but it was also because I'm bipolar.
01:45
I would say for me, I definitely didn't realize something was really wrong with me. I think like Gabe, I think I thought,
01:53
for the first part of my life, I thought it was just me, and those are just how I was. But my eye opening thing was going
02:01
into my sophomore year of college and I actually suffered a knee injury.
02:07
And that sent me-- that was the beginning of my psychotic break, I would say. But I was hospitalized, as well.
02:13
So I definitely could see how that's a that's a traumatic event within itself
02:19
having to go to the hospital. So I just assumed that everyone was thinking about suicide, contemplating ending their lives.
02:26
And this was this was just my experience. So like I said, I thought I was a jerk. So one day I ran across somebody and she
02:35
recognized the symptoms of suicidality, of bipolar disorder. And she was like, there's something really off
02:43
about this guy. She said, are you planning on killing yourself? I said, yes. She freaked out a little and panicked and said,
02:50
you need to go to the emergency room. I said, the emergency room? I'm not sick. The emergency room is, like, for a heart attack
02:56
or when you fall off your roof-- car accident. Like, you're nuts, lady. I actually thought she was the crazy one.
03:03
You know, people who are suicidal need to go to the emergency room. It blew my entire world view.
03:09
If I didn't run into her, I would not be sitting here. I was a freshman. And I was trying to just assimilate, make friends and get
03:19
good grades. But my manic episode crept up. So I had to reach psychosis and completely just
03:26
lose complete touch with and then be hospitalized. There's just terms and things you don't understand.
03:34
And it's rough. It's rough. For me, I really don't experience much of the mania. But it's just constant sadness, like, all the time.
03:44
And when I do experience any of those manic symptoms, it's usually part of a mixed episode, which I don't know if you guys have experienced those,
03:51
but those are a trip. And I just was so frenetic, like with energy, like I just could not do enough to get the energy out
03:59
of my body, but was also really, really sad at the same time. And so I wrote, like, six pages of just like-- fired off all
04:06
this stuff that I was feeling. And I brought it to my therapist. And she was like, OK, so we need to discuss what's happening here.
04:12
And that's when I finally got a diagnosis, which was so helpful because now I had a vocabulary to explain what was going on.

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