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ContacT JaN
SunDay - SaturDay
24 / 7
ACRONYMS
TEAM. Together Everyone Achieves More.
FAIL. 1St attempt in learning
END. Effort never dies
NO. Next opportunity.
DAWN. Doing Away With Negativity.
FRIENDS. Fight for you
Respect you
Include you
Encourage you
Need you
Stand by you
HUSBAND. he
Understands
Situations
Better
And
Never
Disappears
WIFE. We
In
For
Eternity
LOVE. Live
Once
Value
Everything
Fear. Face Everything And Rise.
HEALS. Helpful Efforts Always Leads To Success.
ADIH. another day in hell
AFAIK. as far as I know
AFK. away from keyboard
ALL RIGHT. aight
AIMP. always in my prayers
AWTTW. a word to the wise
BEFORE YOU. B4U
BYE FOR NOW. b4n
BACK AT U. b@u
BACK AT U. B@u
BE BACK IN A BIT. Bbiab
BYE FOR NOW. b4n
BELIEVE IT OR NOT. Bion
BELLY ROLL LAUGHS. Brl
LAUGHING MY ASS OFF. Lmao
TALK TO YA LATER. ttyl
TALK TO YA SOON. Ttys
BEFORE. B4
ARE. R
YOU. U
WHEN. wen
I DONT KNOW. Idk
BETTER. Btr
BEST WISHES. BW
BEFORE YOU KNEW THAT. Bukt
SEE YA. C ya
SEE. C
CHILLING. chln
CALL ME. CM
CALL ME BACK. CMB
CHUCKLE OUT LOUD. COL
CANT TALK. CANT TXT. CT
SEE YOU LATER. CUL
LATER. LTR
COUPLE. CUPLE
COMPLETE WASTE OF TIME. CWOT
SEE YOU TOMORROW. CUT
DONT BE DUMB. DBD
DUDE. DEWD
THESE. DESE
THIS. TIS
WHAT THE FUCK. WTF
SAME HERE. DITTO
DONT JUDGE ME. DJM
DO NOT DISTURB. DND
DAMN STRAIGHT. DSTR8
Do you love it. Duli
EVIL LAUGH. EL
EVIL GRIN. EG
EMAIL ADDRESS. EMA
EXCUSE ME. EM
END OF MESSAGE. EOM
END OF TEXT. EOT
FAVORITE. FAV
FIRST COME FIRST SERVE. FCFS
FATAL ERROR. FE
IM FUNNY. IM
FUCKING FUNNY. FF
FUCK THEM. FKM
FUCK OFF. FO
FRIEND OF A FRIEND. FOAF
FOR SOME REASON. FSR
FAILURE TO COMMUNICATE. FTC
FUCK YOU TOO. FU2
FORWARD. FWD
FOR YOUR EYES ONLY. FYEO
FOR YOUR INFORMATION. FYI
GOOD ONE. G1
Good afternoon. GA
GOOD MORNING. GM
GOOD DAY. GD
GOD DAMN IT. GDI
GIRLFFRIEND. GF
BOYFRIEND. BF
GEE I DONT KNOW. GIDK
GOOD NIGHT. GN
NIGHT. NGHT
GET ON WITH IT. GOWI
GOOD SENSE OF HUMOR. GSOH
GET WITH IT. GWI
GET WELL SOON. GWS
JmaC
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BEAT LIFE JmaC
BEAT LIFE
Life is like a treasure hunt. We keep searching for the answers to unlock mysteries presented to us by life. We are always on a wild goose chase thinking we are nearing the key that will unravel the mystery and we end up with another puzzle on our hands. A few lucky ones find their hands.
The only way to beat life at its own game is being in control of yourself and never give up on anything or anybody. Even if you lose, learn the lesson, and move on. When life gives you a hundred reasons to frown, show life that you have a thousand reasons to smile.
Jmac
Posted in Poetry Corner
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5 positive things about having bipolar disorder
1. It Gives You Strength, Tenacity, or “Chutzpah”
“Having bipolar disorder means I am a fighter and a survivor. I have been through things other people couldn’t imagine, but I am a stronger person because of it.” – Olivia Fuller
“Bipolar has given me Chutzpah. That is a Yiddish word that means a great many things…tenacity, moxie, audacity” – Susan Schlesinger
2. It Makes You More Proactive About Your Overall Health
“A huge part of managing bipolar is being proactive about my physical health: what I eat, how I exercise, and how I sleep. It’s important that I stay away from processed foods (helps to manage moods), practice yoga and meditation every day (to keep my anxiety/depression at bay), and sleep a solid 9 hours (inadequate sleep often results in worsening symptoms).” – Lyndsay Marvin
“In order to take care of yourself mentally, you have to take care of your overall physical health. Exercising and eating better helps you stay more positive in the long run.” – Sarah DeArmond
“I have incorporated various practices into the start of my day to begin in a more grounded yet energized way. My morning activation (routine) consists of meditation, intention statements, and yoga. If I wasn’t diagnosed with bipolar disorder I don’t know if I would have these practices incorporated into my mornings.” – Scott Walker
3. It Gives You Empathy For Other People
“I feel like I’m more sensitive to others and less likely to judge after what I’ve personally been through.” – Sarah DeArmond
“I believe I’m more empathetic towards everyone as a whole. For instance, if someone lashes out at me, instead of getting defensive or wondering what their problem is and being angry for the rest of the day, I’ll think more so about how they could have some issue I know nothing about. They may not be coping well. I should probably make efforts to ease their stress a bit more in the future and maybe ask how they’re doing more often.” – Briana Hedgepeth
4. It Helps You Know Who Your Real Friends Are
“It gives insight ln who is really there for you in your weakest and will abide your side. It proves how much some people love us unconditionally to stand by our side through thick and thin.” – Zeina Adel
“I’m able to tell who my friends are a whole lot quicker than most people.” – Briana Hedgepeth
5. It Gives You The Ability To Help Others Who Have Bipolar Disorder
“The best part is being able to help others” – Jessi Lepine
“I am a Case Manager for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities and suffering with bipolar myself can be difficult, but I think it help me be able to relate with individuals on my caseload at times better. I have “been in their shoes” so to speak. It definitely doesn’t work with all consumers since everyone is so different, but it helps with rapport and trust.” – Lori Krausen
“I was able to help my own child when he was diagnosed with bipolar disorder, he felt comfortable coming to me, because I never hid it from anyone, including my children.” – Terri Smeigh
“I would like others to benefit from my struggles with bipolar disorder” – Shannon Yazurlo
the support team @
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Quotes what does mental health awareness mean to you
Mental Illness Awareness Week is the first full week of October. This year, we ask our volunteers what mental illness awareness means to them. Here’s what they had to say:
1. “Mental Illness Awareness means recognizing that mental illness is as real as any physical illness.” – Clarice Andrade
2. “It means recognizing that mental illness affects not only the individual, but everyone from friends
and families to entire communities, no matter how big or small.” – Whitney Parrish
3. “It means educating people on what mental illness means, how to prevent it, and to remove the stigma about it.” – Faith Morante
4. “To be sensitive and knowledgeable about brain diseases. To advocate for mental health by being against stigma and prejudice.” – Linda Allen
5. “Mental illness awareness means bringing down the walls of stigma by sharing our experiences, stories, and truths. It means educating others on what mental illness REALLY is, and helping those with illnesses know they are not alone.” – Lyndsay Marvin
6. “Mental health awareness means that we’re not only acknowledging that mental health is important, but we’re talking about it, putting it out there so that people who feel too much can get the help they need too.” – Jessica Hull
7. “Awareness is the acceptance and understanding of something, in part or whole. It means learning about mental illness and being familiar with the vernacular of the movement. It means accepting the medical nature of it and not asking that people ‘get over it,’ when the solution is much more complex. At its finest, awareness also involves advocacy.” – Liz Wilson
8. “It means teaching others about what it really means to have a mental illness. It’s more than what you see on the news and how it’s portrayed in the media.” – Sarah DeArmond
9. “Mental illness awareness for me is being comfortable talking about my mental health without the fear of being judged for it. It’s less stigma and less hatred towards those with mental illness.” – Briana Hedgepeth
10. “It means the knowledge that mental disorders are not illusions formed by one’s brain due to boredom or lack of personality. It means the understanding of the fact that depression is difficult to conquer. It means the ability to appreciate the effort of living and caring. It means all of those things and better yet it means the difficulty of faking a smile and going through the day without complaining.” – Zeina Adel
11. “Educating people to reduce stigma and improve quality of life for those with mental illness and their families.” – Jessi Lepine
12. “I have always believed the meaning of stigma is the lack of understanding of the unknown. With making it more aware will lessen the fear people have of Mental Health Diseases.” – Jan McAvoy Roga
13. “It means to educate myself to the extent that I can separate the person from the illness.” – Aarti Girdhar
14. “Mental illness awareness means acceptance and love rather than judgement and shame; it means an end to the stigma and the beginning of hope.” – Annie Slease
The support team @
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Positive things about having Bipolar Disorder
1. It Gives You Strength, Tenacity, or “Chutzpah”
“Having bipolar disorder means I am a fighter and a survivor. I have been through things other people couldn’t imagine, but I am a stronger person because of it.” – Olivia Fuller
“Bipolar has given me Chutzpah. That is a Yiddish word that means a great many things…tenacity, moxie, audacity” – Susan Schlesinger
2. It Makes You More Proactive About Your Overall Health
“A huge part of managing bipolar is being proactive about my physical health: what I eat, how I exercise, and how I sleep. It’s important that I stay away from processed foods (helps to manage moods), practice yoga and meditation every day (to keep my anxiety/depression at bay), and sleep a solid 9 hours (inadequate sleep often results in worsening symptoms).” – Lyndsay Marvin
“In order to take care of yourself mentally, you have to take care of your overall physical health. Exercising and eating better helps you stay more positive in the long run.” – Sarah DeArmond
“I have incorporated various practices into the start of my day to begin in a more grounded yet energized way. My morning activation (routine) consists of meditation, intention statements, and yoga. If I wasn’t diagnosed with bipolar disorder I don’t know if I would have these practices incorporated into my mornings.” – Scott Walker
3. It Gives You Empathy For Other People
“I feel like I’m more sensitive to others and less likely to judge after what I’ve personally been through.” – Sarah DeArmond
“I believe I’m more empathetic towards everyone as a whole. For instance, if someone lashes out at me, instead of getting defensive or wondering what their problem is and being angry for the rest of the day, I’ll think more so about how they could have some issue I know nothing about. They may not be coping well. I should probably make efforts to ease their stress a bit more in the future and maybe ask how they’re doing more often.” – Briana Hedgepeth
4. It Helps You Know Who Your Real Friends Are
“It gives insight ln who is really there for you in your weakest and will abide your side. It proves how much some people love us unconditionally to stand by our side through thick and thin.” – Zeina Adel
“I’m able to tell who my friends are a whole lot quicker than most people.” – Briana Hedgepeth
5. It Gives You The Ability To Help Others Who Have Bipolar Disorder
“The best part is being able to help others” – Jessi Lepine
“I am a Case Manager for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities and suffering with bipolar myself can be difficult, but I think it help me be able to relate with individuals on my caseload at times better. I have “been in their shoes” so to speak. It definitely doesn’t work with all consumers since everyone is so different, but it helps with rapport and trust.” – Lori Krausen
“I was able to help my own child when he was diagnosed with bipolar disorder, he felt comfortable coming to me, because I never hid it from anyone, including my children.” – Terri Smeigh
“I would like others to benefit from my struggles with bipolar disorder” – Shannon Yazurlo
Jan @
the support team
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STIGMA SAY IT FORWARD
DUCATE & INSPIRE
When it comes to mental health conditions, silence is not golden. Silence breeds stigma, and stigma hurts. It prevents people from seeking life-saving treatment and support. International Bipolar Foundation (IBPF) hopes that you will join forces with us to educate and inspire people to learn the facts, and talk about mental illness to eliminate the barrier of stigma.
TAKE ACTION October 12th-18th
Help us Say It Forward to eliminate the barrier by choosing messages from from our
sayitforwardcampaign.org website to share this week via your choice of social media, email, or all three! Reach out to as many individuals as possible and encourage everyone to learn the truth about mental illness this week of October 12th through 18th! #SayItForward #EliminateTheBarrier.
The Say It Forward Campaign is brought to you by
The support team @
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Free self belief affirmations
Present Tense
- I always succeed
- I am confident
- I achieve massive success
- I am capable of reaching any goal
- I am ready for anything
- I am always positive
- My mind is completely focused on success
- I am able to handle whatever life brings my way
- I am a beautiful person
- Others see me as confident and successful
Future Tense
- I will believe in myself
- I will develop an unshakeable self belief
- Each day I feel more powerful and capable
- I am transforming into someone who can achieve anything
- I will achieve whatever I set my mind to
- I am starting to feel more and more confident in my abilities
- I will always love, respect, and believe in myself unconditionally
- Self belief is transforming me into a highly successful person
- Others are beginning to notice my confident attitude
- Developing self belief will help me to achieve my goals
Natural Tense
- I believe in myself completely
- Achieving success is normal for me
- Self belief comes naturally to me
- I believe that I can achieve anything I want
- Others see me as a highly capable person
- I am the kind of person who confidently goes after success
- It is normal for me to feel great about myself
- I find it easy to pursue my goals with confidence
- I am a high achiever
- I always find a way to succeed
The suppoort team
@
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Poem I cam clearly see
To lie awake each night
Body aching
Yearning
Almost screaming for rest
Body aching
Yearning
Almost screaming for rest
But how can I drift away
Softly slip into slumber
When my thoughts run wild and free
The night has become the dawn for my imagination
The stars hold the key to my inspiration
In the darkness I cam clearly see……..
Jan @
Posted in Poetry Corner
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Bipolar Disorder Defined in pregnancy and in children
BIPOLAR DISORDER DEFINED IN PREGNANCY IN CHILDREN ETC
Bipolar disorder, formerly called manic depression, causes extreme mood swings that include emotional highs (mania or hypomania) and lows (depression). When you become depressed, you may feel sad or hopeless and lose interest or pleasure in most activities. When your mood shifts in the other direction, you may feel euphoric and full of energy. Mood shifts may occur only a few times a year or as often as several times a week.
Although bipolar disorder is a disruptive, long-term condition, you can keep your moods in check by following a treatment plan. In most cases, bipolar disorder can be controlled with medications and psychological counseling (psychotherapy).
There are several types of bipolar and related disorders. For each type, the exact symptoms of bipolar disorder can vary from person to person. Bipolar I and bipolar II disorders also have additional specific features that can be added to the diagnosis based on your particular signs and symptoms.
Criteria for bipolar disorder
The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5), published by the American Psychiatric Association, lists criteria for diagnosing bipolar and related disorders. This manual is used by mental health providers to diagnose mental conditions and by insurance companies to reimburse for treatment.
Diagnostic criteria for bipolar and related disorders are based on the specific type of disorder:
- Bipolar I disorder. You’ve had at least one manic episode. The manic episode may be preceded by or followed by hypomanic or major depressive episodes. Mania symptoms cause significant impairment in your life and may require hospitalization or trigger a break from reality (psychosis).
- Bipolar II disorder. You’ve had at least one major depressive episode lasting at least two weeks and at least one hypomanic episode lasting at least four days, but you’ve never had a manic episode. Major depressive episodes or the unpredictable changes in mood and behavior can cause distress or difficulty in areas of your life.
- Cyclothymic disorder. You’ve had at least two years — or one year in children and teenagers — of numerous periods of hypomania symptoms (less severe than a hypomanic episode) and periods of depressive symptoms (less severe than a major depressive episode). During that time, symptoms occur at least half the time and never go away for more than two months. Symptoms cause significant distress in important areas of your life.
- Other types. These include, for example, bipolar and related disorder due to another medical condition, such as Cushing’s disease, multiple sclerosis or stroke. Another type is called substance and medication-induced bipolar and related disorder.
Bipolar II disorder is not a milder form of bipolar I disorder, but a separate diagnosis. While the manic episodes of bipolar I disorder can be severe and dangerous, individuals with bipolar II disorder can be depressed for longer periods, which can cause significant impairment.
Criteria for a manic or hypomanic episode
The DSM-5 has specific criteria for the diagnosis of manic and hypomanic episodes:
- A manic episode is a distinct period of abnormally and persistently elevated, expansive or irritable mood that lasts at least one week (or less than a week if hospitalization is necessary). The episode includes persistently increased goal-directed activity or energy.
- A hypomanic episode is a distinct period of abnormally and persistently elevated, expansive or irritable mood that lasts at least four consecutive days.
For both a manic and a hypomanic episode, during the period of disturbed mood and increased energy, three or more of the following symptoms (four if the mood is only irritable) must be present and represent a noticeable change from your usual behavior:
- Inflated self-esteem or grandiosity
- Decreased need for sleep (for example, you feel rested after only three hours of sleep)
- Unusual talkativeness
- Racing thoughts
- Distractibility
- Increased goal-directed activity (either socially, at work or school, or sexually) or agitation
- Doing things that are unusual and that have a high potential for painful consequences — for example, unrestrained buying sprees, sexual indiscretions or foolish business investments
To be considered a manic episode:
- The mood disturbance must be severe enough to cause noticeable difficulty at work, at school or in social activities or relationships; or to require hospitalization to prevent harm to yourself or others; or to trigger a break from reality (psychosis).
- Symptoms are not due to the direct effects of something else, such as alcohol or drug use; a medication; or a medical condition.
To be considered a hypomanic episode:
- The episode is a distinct change in mood and functioning that is not characteristic of you when the symptoms are not present, and enough of a change that other people notice.
- The episode isn’t severe enough to cause significant difficulty at work, at school or in social activities or relationships, and it doesn’t require hospitalization or trigger a break from reality.
- Symptoms are not due to the direct effects of something else, such as alcohol or drug use; a medication; or a medical condition.
Criteria for a major depressive episode
The DSM-5 also lists criteria for diagnosis of a major depressive episode:
- Five or more of the symptoms below over a two-week period that represent a change from previous mood and functioning. At least one of the symptoms is either depressed mood or loss of interest or pleasure.
- Symptoms can be based on your own feelings or on the observations of someone else.
Signs and symptoms include:
- Depressed mood most of the day, nearly every day, such as feeling sad, empty, hopeless or tearful (in children and teens, depressed mood can appear as irritability)
- Markedly reduced interest or feeling no pleasure in all — or almost all — activities most of the day, nearly every day
- Significant weight loss when not dieting, weight gain, or decrease or increase in appetite nearly every day (in children, failure to gain weight as expected can be a sign of depression)
- Either insomnia or sleeping excessively nearly every day
- Either restlessness or slowed behavior that can be observed by others
- Fatigue or loss of energy nearly every day
- Feelings of worthlessness or excessive or inappropriate guilt, such as believing things that are not true, nearly every day
- Decreased ability to think or concentrate, or indecisiveness, nearly every day
- Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide, or suicide planning or attempt
To be considered a major depressive episode:
- Symptoms must be severe enough to cause noticeable difficulty in day-to-day activities, such as work, school, social activities or relationships
- Symptoms are not due to the direct effects of something else, such as alcohol or drug use, a medication or a medical condition
- Symptoms are not caused by grieving, such as after the loss of a loved one
Other signs and symptoms of bipolar disorder
Signs and symptoms of bipolar I and bipolar II disorders may include additional features.
- Anxious distress — having anxiety, such as feeling keyed up, tense or restless, having trouble concentrating because of worry, fearing something awful may happen, or feeling you may not be able to control yourself
- Mixed features — meeting the criteria for a manic or hypomanic episode, but also having some or all symptoms of major depressive episode at the same time
- Melancholic features — having a loss of pleasure in all or most activities and not feeling significantly better, even when something good happens
- Atypical features — experiencing symptoms that are not typical of a major depressive episode, such as having a significantly improved mood when something good happens
- Catatonia — not reacting to your environment, holding your body in an unusual position, not speaking, or mimicking another person’s speech or movement
- Peripartum onset — bipolar disorder symptoms that occur during pregnancy or in the four weeks after delivery
- Seasonal pattern — a lifetime pattern of manic, hypomanic or major depressive episodes that change with the seasons
- Rapid cycling — having four or more mood swing episodes within a single year, with full or partial remission of symptoms in between manic, hypomanic or major depressive episodes
- Psychosis — severe episode of either mania or depression (but not hypomania) that results in a detachment from reality and includes symptoms of false but strongly held beliefs (delusions) and hearing or seeing things that aren’t there (hallucinations)
Symptoms in children and teens
The same DSM-5 criteria used to diagnose bipolar disorder in adults are used to diagnose children and teenagers. Children and teens may have distinct major depressive, manic or hypomanic episodes, between which they return to their usual behavior, but that’s not always the case. And moods can rapidly shift during acute episodes.
Symptoms of bipolar disorder can be difficult to identify in children and teens. It’s often hard to tell whether these are normal ups and downs, the results of stress or trauma, or signs of a mental health problem other than bipolar disorder. And children who have bipolar disorder are frequently also diagnosed with other mental health conditions.
The most prominent signs of bipolar disorder in children and teenagers may include severe mood swings that are different from their usual mood swings.
When to see a doctor
If you have any symptoms of depression or mania, see your doctor or mental health provider. Bipolar disorder doesn’t get better on its own. Getting treatment from a mental health provider with experience in bipolar disorder can help you get your symptoms under control.
Many people with bipolar disorder don’t get the treatment they need. Despite the mood extremes, people with bipolar disorder often don’t recognize how much their emotional instability disrupts their lives and the lives of their loved ones.
And if you’re like some people with bipolar disorder, you may enjoy the feelings of euphoria and cycles of being more productive. However, this euphoria is always followed by an emotional crash that can leave you depressed, worn out — and perhaps in financial, legal or relationship trouble.
If you’re reluctant to seek treatment, confide in a friend or loved one, a health care professional, a faith leader or someone else you trust. He or she may be able to help you take the first steps to successful treatment.
When to get emergency help
Suicidal thoughts and behavior are common among people with bipolar disorder. If you think you may hurt yourself or attempt suicide, call 911 or your local emergency number immediately.
Also consider these options:
- Reach out to a close friend or loved one.
- Contact a minister, spiritual leader or someone in your faith community.
- Call a suicide hotline number — in the United States, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at
800-273-TALK FREE (
800-273-8255 FREE) to reach a trained counselor. Use that same number and press 1 to reach the Veterans Crisis Line. - Make an appointment with your doctor, mental health provider or other health care provider.
If you have a loved one who is in danger of committing suicide or has made a suicide attempt, make sure someone stays with that person. Call 911 or your local emergency number immediately. Or, if you think you can do so safely, take the person to the nearest hospital emergency room.
The exact cause of bipolar disorder is unknown, but several factors may be involved, such as:
- Biological differences. People with bipolar disorder appear to have physical changes in their brains. The significance of these changes is still uncertain but may eventually help pinpoint causes.
- Neurotransmitters. An imbalance in naturally occurring brain chemicals called neurotransmitters seems to play a significant role in bipolar disorder and other mood disorders.
- Inherited traits. Bipolar disorder is more common in people who have a first-degree relative, such as a sibling or parent, with the condition. Researchers are trying to find genes that may be involved in causing bipolar disorder.
Factors that may increase the risk of developing bipolar disorder or act as a trigger for the first episode include:
- Having a first-degree relative, such as a parent or sibling, with bipolar disorder
- Periods of high stress
- Drug or alcohol abuse
- Major life changes, such as the death of a loved one or other traumatic experiences
Conditions that commonly occur with bipolar disorder
If you have bipolar disorder, you may also have another health condition that’s diagnosed before or after your diagnosis of bipolar disorder. Such conditions need to be diagnosed and treated because they may worsen existing bipolar disorder or make treatment less successful. They include:
- Anxiety disorders. Examples include social anxiety disorder and generalized anxiety disorder.
- Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Some people with PTSD, a trauma- and stressor-related disorder, also have bipolar disorder.
- Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). ADHD has symptoms that overlap with bipolar disorder. For this reason, bipolar disorder can be difficult to differentiate from ADHD. Sometimes one is mistaken for the other. In some cases, a person may be diagnosed with both conditions.
- Addiction or substance abuse. Many people with bipolar disorder also have alcohol, tobacco or drug problems. Drugs or alcohol may seem to ease symptoms, but they can actually trigger, prolong or worsen depression or mania.
- Physical health problems. People diagnosed with bipolar disorder are more likely to have certain other health problems, such as heart disease, thyroid problems or obesity.
Left untreated, bipolar disorder can result in serious problems that affect every area of your life. These may include:
- Problems related to drug and alcohol use
- Suicide or suicide attempts
- Legal problems
- Financial problems
- Relationship troubles
- Isolation and loneliness
- Poor work or school performance
- Frequent absences from work or school
You may start by seeing your primary care doctor or you may choose to see a medical doctor who specializes in diagnosing and treating mental health conditions (psychiatrist).
What you can do
Before your appointment, make a list of:
- Any symptoms you’ve had, including any that may seem unrelated to the reason for the appointment
- Key personal information, including any major stresses or recent life changes
- All medications, vitamins or other supplements that you’re taking, and their dose
- Questions to ask your doctor
Take a family member or friend along, if possible. That person may provide more information or remember something that you missed or forgot.
Some basic questions to ask your doctor include:
- Do I have bipolar disorder?
- Are there any other possible causes for my symptoms?
- What kinds of tests will I need?
- What treatments are available? Which do you recommend for me?
- What side effects are possible with that treatment?
- What are the alternatives to the primary approach that you’re suggesting?
- I have these other health conditions. How can I best manage these conditions together?
- Should I see a psychiatrist or other mental health provider?
- Is there a generic alternative to the medicine you’re prescribing?
- Are there any brochures or other printed material that I can have? What websites do you recommend?
Don’t hesitate to ask questions at any time during your appointment.
What to expect from your doctor
Your doctor is likely to ask you a number of questions. Be ready to answer them to reserve time to go over any points you want to spend more time on. Your doctor may ask:
- When did you or your loved ones first begin noticing your symptoms of depression, mania or hypomania?
- How frequently do your moods change?
- Do you ever have suicidal thoughts when you’re feeling down?
- Do your symptoms interfere with your daily life or relationships?
- Do you have any blood relatives with bipolar disorder or depression?
- What other mental or physical health conditions do you have?
- Do you drink alcohol, smoke cigarettes or use street drugs?
- How much do you sleep at night? Does it change over time?
- Do you go through periods when you take risks that you wouldn’t normally take, such as unsafe sex or unwise, spontaneous financial decisions?
- What, if anything, seems to improve your symptoms?
- What, if anything, appears to worsen your symptoms?
When doctors suspect someone has bipolar disorder, they typically do a number of tests and exams. These can help rule out other problems, pinpoint a diagnosis and also check for any related complications. These may include:
- Physical exam. A physical exam and lab tests may be done to help identify any medical problems that could be causing your symptoms.
- Psychological evaluation. Your doctor or mental health provider will talk to you about your thoughts, feelings and behavior patterns. You may also fill out a psychological self-assessment or questionnaire. With your permission, family members or close friends may be asked to provide information about your symptoms and possible episodes of mania or depression.
- Mood charting. To identify exactly what’s going on, your doctor may have you keep a daily record of your moods, sleep patterns or other factors that could help with diagnosis and finding the right treatment.
- Signs and symptoms. Your doctor or mental health professional typically will compare your symptoms with the criteria for bipolar and related disorders in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders to determine a diagnosis.
Diagnosis in children
Although bipolar disorder can occur in young children, typically it’s diagnosed in the teenage years or early 20s. It’s often hard to tell whether a child’s emotional ups and downs are normal for his or her age, the results of stress or trauma, or signs of a mental health problem other than bipolar disorder.
Bipolar symptoms in children and teens often have different patterns than they do in adults and may not fit neatly into the categories used for diagnosis. And children who have bipolar disorder are frequently also diagnosed with other mental health conditions such as attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) or behavior problems.
Your child’s doctor can help you learn the symptoms of bipolar disorder and how they differ from behavior related to your child’s developmental age, the situation and appropriate cultural behavior.
Treatment is best guided by a psychiatrist skilled in treating bipolar and related disorders. You may have a treatment team that also includes a psychologist, social worker and psychiatric nurse.
Depending on your needs, treatment may include:
- Initial treatment. Often, you’ll need to start taking medications to balance your moods right away. Once your symptoms are under control, you’ll work with your doctor to find the best long-term treatment.
- Continued treatment. Bipolar disorder requires lifelong treatment, even during periods when you feel better. Maintenance treatment is used to manage bipolar disorder on a long-term basis. People who skip maintenance treatment are at high risk of a relapse of symptoms or having minor mood changes turn into full-blown mania or depression.
- Day treatment programs. Your doctor may recommend a day treatment program. These programs provide the support and counseling you need while you get symptoms under control.
- Substance abuse treatment. If you have problems with alcohol or drugs, you’ll also need substance abuse treatment. Otherwise, it can be very difficult to manage bipolar disorder.
- Hospitalization. Your doctor may recommend hospitalization if you’re behaving dangerously, you feel suicidal or you become detached from reality (psychotic). Getting psychiatric treatment at a hospital can help keep you calm and safe and stabilize your mood, whether you’re having a manic or major depressive episode.
The primary treatments for bipolar disorder include medications and psychological counseling (psychotherapy), and may include education and support groups.
Medications
A number of medications are used to treat bipolar disorder. The types and doses of medications prescribed are based on your particular symptoms.
Medications may include:
- Mood stabilizers. Whether you have bipolar I or II disorder, you’ll typically need mood-stabilizing medication to control manic or hypomanic episodes. Examples of mood stabilizers include lithium (Lithobid), valproic acid (Depakene), divalproex sodium (Depakote), carbamazepine (Tegretol, Equetro, others) and lamotrigine (Lamictal).
- Antipsychotics. If symptoms of depression or mania persist in spite of treatment with other medications, adding an antipsychotic medication such as olanzapine (Zyprexa), risperidone (Risperdal), quetiapine (Seroquel), aripiprazole (Abilify), ziprasidone (Geodon), lurasidone (Latuda) or asenapine (Saphris) may help. Your doctor may prescribe some of these medications alone or along with a mood stabilizer.
- Antidepressants. Your doctor may add an antidepressant to help manage depression. Because an antidepressant can sometimes trigger a manic episode, it’s usually prescribed along with a mood stabilizer or antipsychotic.
- Antidepressant-antipsychotic. The medication Symbyax combines the antidepressant fluoxetine and the antipsychotic olanzapine. It works as a depression treatment and a mood stabilizer. Symbyax is approved by the Food and Drug Administration specifically for the treatment of depressive episodes associated with bipolar I disorder.
- Anti-anxiety medications. Benzodiazepines may help with anxiety and improve sleep. Benzodiazepines are generally used for relieving anxiety only on a short-term basis.
Side effects
Talk to your doctor or mental health provider about side effects. If side effects seem intolerable, you may be tempted to stop taking your medication or to reduce your dose on your own. Don’t do it. You may experience withdrawal effects or your symptoms may return.
Side effects often improve as you find the right medications and doses that work for you, and your body adjusts to the medications.
Finding the right medication
Finding the right medication or medications for you will likely take some trial and error. If one doesn’t work well for you, there are several others to try.
This process requires patience, as some medications need weeks to months to take full effect. Generally only one medication is changed at a time so that your doctor can identify which medications work to relieve your symptoms with the least bothersome side effects. Medications also may need to be adjusted as your symptoms change.
Medications and pregnancy
A number of medications for bipolar disorder can be associated with birth defects. Discuss these issues with your doctor:
- Birth control options, as birth control medications may lose effectiveness when taken along with certain bipolar disorder medications
- Treatment options if you plan to become pregnant
- Breast-feeding, as some bipolar medications can pass through breast milk to your infant
Psychotherapy
Psychotherapy is a vital part of bipolar disorder treatment and can be provided in individual, family or group settings. Several types of therapy may be helpful. These include:
- Cognitive behavioral therapy. The focus of cognitive behavioral therapy is identifying unhealthy, negative beliefs and behaviors and replacing them with healthy, positive ones. It can help identify what triggers your bipolar episodes. You also learn effective strategies to manage stress and to cope with upsetting situations.
- Psychoeducation. Counseling to help you learn about bipolar disorder (psychoeducation) can help you and your loved ones understand bipolar disorder. Knowing what’s going on can help you get the best support and treatment, and help you and your loved ones recognize warning signs of mood swings.
- Interpersonal and social rhythm therapy (IPSRT). IPSRT focuses on the stabilization of daily rhythms, such as sleep, wake and mealtimes. A consistent routine allows for better mood management. People with bipolar disorder may benefit from establishing a daily routine for sleep, diet and exercise.
- Other therapies. Other therapies have been studied with some evidence of success. Ask your doctor if any other options may be appropriate for you.
Other treatment options
Depending on your needs, other treatments may be added to your depression therapy, such as:
- Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). In ECT, electrical currents are passed through the brain. This procedure is thought to affect levels of neurotransmitters in your brain and typically offers immediate relief of even severe depression when other treatments don’t work. Physical side effects, such as headache, are tolerable. Some people also have memory loss, which is usually temporary. ECT is usually used for people who don’t get better with medications, can’t take antidepressants for health reasons or are at high risk of suicide. ECT may be an option if you have mania or severe depression when you’re pregnant and cannot take your regular medications.
- Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). TMS may be an option for those who haven’t responded to antidepressants. During TMS, you sit in a reclining chair with a treatment coil placed against your scalp. The coil sends brief magnetic pulses to stimulate nerve cells in your brain that are involved in mood regulation and depression. Typically, you’ll have five treatments each week for up to six weeks.
Treatment in children and teenagers
Treatments for children and teenagers are generally decided on a case-by-case basis, depending on symptoms, medication side effects and other factors.
- Medications. Children and teens with bipolar disorder are often prescribed the same types of medications as those used in adults. There’s less research on the safety and effectiveness of bipolar medications in children than in adults, so treatment decisions are often based on adult research.
- Psychotherapy. Most children diagnosed with bipolar disorder require counseling as part of initial treatment and to keep symptoms from returning. Psychotherapy can help children develop coping skills, address learning difficulties, resolve social problems, and help strengthen family bonds and communication. And, if needed, it can help treat substance abuse problems, common in older children with bipolar disorder.
- Support. Working with teachers and school counselors and encouraging support from family and friends can help identify services and encourage success.
You’ll probably need to make lifestyle changes to stop cycles of behavior that worsen your bipolar disorder. Here are some steps to take:
- Quit drinking or using illegal drugs. One of the biggest concerns with bipolar disorder is the negative consequences of risk-taking behavior and drug or alcohol abuse. Get help if you have trouble quitting on your own.
- Steer clear of unhealthy relationships. Surround yourself with people who are a positive influence and won’t encourage unhealthy behavior or attitudes that can worsen your bipolar disorder.
- Get regular physical activity and exercise. Moderate, regular physical activity and exercise can help steady your mood. Working out releases brain chemicals that make you feel good (endorphins), can help you sleep and has a number of other benefits. Check with your doctor before starting any exercise program, especially if you’re taking lithium, to make sure exercise won’t interfere with your medication.
- Get plenty of sleep. Don’t stay up all night. Instead, get plenty of sleep. Sleeping enough is an important part of managing your mood. If you have trouble sleeping, talk to your doctor or mental health provider about what you can do.
Alternative medicine is the use of a nonconventional approach instead of conventional medicine. Complementary medicine is a nonconventional approach used along with conventional medicine.
There isn’t much research on alternative medicine and bipolar disorder. Most of the studies on alternative or complementary medicine that do exist are on major depression, so it isn’t clear how well most of these work for bipolar disorder.
- Omega-3 fatty acids. These oils may help improve depression associated with bipolar disorder. Bipolar disorder appears to be less common in areas of the world where people regularly eat fish rich in omega-3s. Omega-3s appear to have a number of health benefits, but more studies are needed to determine just how much they help with bipolar disorder.
- Magnesium. Several small studies have suggested that magnesium supplements may lessen mania and the rapid cycling of bipolar symptoms. More research is needed to confirm these findings.
- St. John’s wort. This herb may be helpful with depression. However, it can also interact with antidepressants and other medications, and it has the potential to trigger mania in some people.
- S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAMe). This amino acid supplement appears to help brain function related to depression. It isn’t clear yet whether it’s helpful in people with bipolar disorder. As with St. John’s wort, SAMe can trigger mania in some people.
- Herbal combinations. Herbal remedies that combine a number of different herbs, such as those used in traditional Chinese medicine, haven’t been well-studied and the contents may vary among products. Risks and benefits still aren’t clear.
- Acupuncture. This ancient Chinese practice of inserting tiny needles into the skin may relieve depression, but more studies are needed to confirm its benefits. However, acupuncture is considered safe and can be done along with other bipolar disorder treatments.
If you choose to use complementary medicine in addition to your physician-recommended treatment, take some precautions first:
- Don’t stop taking your prescribed medications or skip therapy sessions. Alternative medicine is not a substitute for regular medical care when it comes to treating bipolar disorder.
- Be honest with your doctors and mental health providers. Tell them exactly which complementary treatments you use or would like to try.
- Be aware of potential dangers. Just because it’s natural doesn’t mean it’s safe. Before using alternative or complementary medicine, find out the risks, including possible interactions with medications.
Coping with bipolar disorder can be challenging. Here are some strategies that can help:
- Learn about bipolar disorder. Education about your condition can empower you and motivate you to stick to your treatment plan. Help educate your family and friends about what you’re going through.
- Stay focused on your goals. Recovery from bipolar disorder can take time. Stay motivated by keeping your recovery goals in mind and reminding yourself that you can work to repair damaged relationships and other problems caused by your mood swings.
- Join a support group. Support groups for people with bipolar disorder can help you connect to others facing similar challenges and share experiences.
- Find healthy outlets. Explore healthy ways to channel your energy, such as hobbies, exercise and recreational activities.
- Learn ways to relax and manage stress. Yoga, tai chi, massage, meditation or other relaxation techniques can be helpful.
There’s no sure way to prevent bipolar disorder. However, getting treatment at the earliest sign of a mental health disorder can help prevent bipolar disorder or other mental health conditions from worsening.
If you’ve been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, some strategies can help prevent minor symptoms from becoming full-blown episodes of mania or depression:
- Pay attention to warning signs. Addressing symptoms early on can prevent episodes from getting worse. You and your caregivers may have identified a pattern to your bipolar episodes and what triggers them. Call your doctor if you feel you’re falling into an episode of depression or mania. Involve family members or friends in watching for warning signs.
- Avoid drugs and alcohol. Using alcohol or street drugs can worsen your symptoms and make them more likely to come back.
- Take your medications exactly as directed. You may be tempted to stop treatment — but don’t. This can have immediate consequences — you may become very depressed, feel suicidal, or go into a manic or hypomanic episode. If you think you need to make a change, call your doctor.
- Check first before taking other medications. Call the doctor who’s treating you for bipolar disorder before you take medications prescribed by another doctor or any over-the-counter supplements or medications. Sometimes other medications trigger episodes of bipolar disorder or may interfere with medications you’re already taking to treat bipolar disorder.
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Depression diagnosis
The “bottom line” of diagnosis
If your depressions are complicated; if you have mood swings, but not “mania”, you can still be “bipolar enough” to need a treatment that’s more like the treatments we use in more easily recognized Bipolar Disorder. You’ll read here about forms of depression which do not have “mania” to make them stand out as different, yet are not plain depression either. For these people, Depression is by far the main symptom, including especially sleeping too much, extreme fatigue, and lack of motivation. What makes bipolar depression different is the presence of something else as well.
But that “something else” often does not look anything like mania. “Hypomania”, which you’ll learn about here, can show up as extreme insomnia, irritability, agitation/anxiety, and difficulty concentrating. And finally, some people can havesome bipolarity without any hypomania at all. Really. You’ll see references to mood experts who have shown all these things as you go.
Wait a minute: isn’t there concern about overdiagnosis of bipolar disorder? Yes, we’ll talk about that too, after you’ve learned some basics.
What happened to “manic-depressive”? What’s “Bipolar II”?
Somewhere along the way you probably learned about manic-depressive illness: episodes of mania, and episodes of severe depression. Here are the symptoms of “mania”. Not that you have these, as such; the lack of them is the main point here. Hang on.
- Mood much better than normal
- Rapid speech
- Little need for sleep
- Racing thoughts, trouble concentrating
- Continuous high energy
- Overconfidence
- Delusions (often grandiose, but including paranoid)
What happened to “manic-depressive”? As our understanding of bipolar disorder has grown, the naming system has changed as well. Recently the concept of a “mixed state” of bipolar disorder, in which manic symptoms and depressive symptoms are found at the same time, was added. Obviously this changes the understanding of manic-depressive illness from one in which the two mood states alternate, to one in which they can co-occur! Things are getting more complicated.
Psychiatry has a diagnostic “rule book” that lists the symptoms people must have in order to meet the definition of a particular “disorder”, called the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual. The most recent edition came out in 2013, the “DSM-5”. If much of what you read below seems to describe you well, but someone tells you “you don’t have bipolar disorder”, it could be that they are using a strict interpretation of the DSM rules. This is a highly controversial area in psychiatry. Even the validity of the DSM itself is now controversial. (For examples of this, see my page on DSM vs Spectrum diagnosis).
Technically Bipolar II describes a pattern in which patients experience “hypomania” (to be discussed in detail below), alternating with episodes of severe depression. However, one of the most experienced professionals in this field, who has bipolar disorder herself, has criticized the DSM as too limited:
“The clinical reality of manic-depressive illness is far more lethal and infinitely more complex than the current psychiatric nomenclature, bipolar disorder, would suggest. Cycles of fluctuating moods and energy levels serve as a background to constantly changing thoughts, behaviors, and feelings. The illness encompasses the extremes of human experience. Thinking can range from florid psychosis, or “madness,” to patterns of unusually clear, fast and creative associations, to retardation so profound that no meaningful mental activity can occur. Behavior can be frenzied, expansive, bizarre, and seductive, or it can be seclusive, sluggish, and dangerously suicidal. Moods may swing erratically between euphoria and despair or irritability and desperation. The rapid oscillations and combinations of such extremes result in an intricately textured clinical picture.” (Kay Jamison, Ph.D.)
I arrived at the same conclusion from listening to patients describe their symptoms. When I used this broader conception to guide treatment, people who had struggled for years often got much better.
Yet when I tried to explain this to some of my colleagues, they thought I was a “bipolar wacko”. That’s how this website got started, and why you’ll see so many reference links. I needed to show that these were not my ideas alone, but rather those of mood experts around the world (it also seemed like a handy way to explain all this to my patients without saying the same thing over and over!) For example, everything you will read below can be found in a review by two mood experts, except that their version is written in full medical jargon.
Even the International Society for Bipolar Disorders has advocated a change in diagnostic procedure, moving beyond the DSM, using what we’ve learned in the last decade. See Ghaemi and colleagues; if you look closely you’ll see that my name is on the list of co-authors. I was honored to be invited to participate and write for this 2008 update on bipolar diagnosis guidelines. I was the lead author on the “Bipolar Spectrum” paper. Its content is reflected below.
What’s “Bipolar II”?
Depression for sure. Depression far more than anything else. And then there’s this other little part. The technical name is misleading, and causes all sorts of trouble, so careful, don’t get thrown off by it. We’re talking about a very small amount (sometimes larger) of manic-side symptoms:
- Mood better than normal
- Rapid speech
- Dramatically reduced sleep
- Racing thoughts, trouble concentrating
- Continuous high energy
- Overconfidence
People with Bipolar II don’t have mania. They don’t have “psychosis” (loss of contact with reality). They don’t have extreme behaviors that people think are “crazy”. They do have phases that their family and friends recognize as “not your usual self”: something unusual along the lines of the bullets above. Notice that “delusions” are gone from the earlier list.
Another variation less severe than Bipolar II is the combination of hypomanic phases with separate phases of milddepression. This is called “cyclothymia”. Getting confused? I certainly was, until I began to think of these variations as points on a continuous spectrum. I hope the following discussion will impress you as simpler.
What is the “mood spectrum?”
Until very recently, depression and “manic-depressive illness” were understood as completely independent: a patient either had one or the other. Now the two are seen by most mood specialists as two extremes on a continuum, with variations found at all points in between, even though only some points have names (e.g. Ghaemi; Pies; Moller;Birmaher; Skeppar; Mackinnon; Angst and Cassano; my ISBD review in 2008; and 2014 updates.)

On the left, the “unipolar” extreme represents straightforward depression with no complications. There are many forms of depression, of course (see “What kinds of depression are there?“). The depressions discussed further below are of a more genetic, or “chemical” nature; versus those of a more situational type, like losing a loved one. Situational depressions may respond well to time or therapy and not require “bipolar” thinking.
On the right, the “manic-depressive” extreme is defined by the presence of manic episodes, just the kind that most people have seen or heard of: full delusional mania. But in between these extremes is a large area which some mood experts think might be the most common form of bipolar disorder: the green zone below.Angst

Got all that? It gets trickier yet. Consider the points A and B on this spectrum:
Point A on the continuum describes people who have a complex depression but who still respond well to antidepressant medication or psychotherapy. Around point B, however, there is some sort of threshold where these approaches are no longer completely or continuously effective: either they don’t work at all, offer only partial relief, or help for a while then “stop working” (which may account for some or much of “Prozac poop-out”, now regarded as a non-manic marker of bipolar disorder, described below).
Until 1994 and the publication of the DSM-IV, there was no official name for all the variations between B and the “manic-depressive” extreme. It was as though these variations did not exist. In the minds of a few, they still don’t, including some psychiatrists who have not adopted this new “spectrum” way of thinking about diagnosis. The DSM does not describe this “spectrum” concept. In it, the entire span between blue and green is still “Major Depression”, the same as the violet end to your left. Only the orange and red zones are clearly “bipolar”.
Light green and yellow is BP NOS, Bipolar Not Otherwise Specified (or in the DSM5: BP-NEC, Not Elsewhere Classified). That diagnosis means you have something that looks like bipolar disorder but does not meet the criteria for BP II or BP I. Isn’t it simpler just to think of it as a continuum? That is much closer to reality. We see all sorts of variations in between these named points on the graph above.
What do “bipolar variations” look like?
Warning: this is controversional territory. Ironically, your diagnosis could be determined more by the professional whom you see than the symptoms you have. Really. Read that again. This happens all the time. If your therapist or nurse practitioner or doctor uses a DSM framework, and you don’t meet criterial for bipolar disorder, then you just don’t have bipolar disorder at all. Period.
On the other hand, if your therapist/NP/etc thinks in terms of a “spectrum” of bipolarity, then you could get a bipolar label that someone else might think was “overdiagnosis”. Starts to sound kind of ridiculous, doesn’t it? But a lot of energy becomes focused here. “Bipolar” carries more stigma than “depression”. Many believe that antidepressants are less risky than mood stabilizers (that’s not so clear either, in my view). So the “yes-or-no” view is still very powerful. You could easily be told “you don’t have bipolar disorder” when someone else has said you do. The solution is to learn more. Read on.
Roller coaster depression
Many people have forms of depression in which their symptoms vary a lot with time: “crash” into depression, then up into doing fine for a while, then “crash” again — sometimes for a reason, but often for no clear reason at all. They feel like they are on some sort of mood “roller coaster”. They wonder if they have “manic-depression”. But, most people know someone or have heard of someone who had a “manic” episode: decreased need for sleep, high energy, risky behaviors, or even grandiose delusions (“I can make millions with my ideas”; “I have a mission in space”; “I’m a special representative for God”). So they think “well, I can’t have that — I’ve never had a manic episode”.
However, a spectrum view of mood disorders invites you to reconsider. Hypomania doesn’t look or feel at all like full delusional mania in some patients. Sometimes there is just a clear sense of something cyclic going on. (For a striking version of this, read a patient’s account).
Some mood disorder experts consider depression that occurs repeatedly to have a high likelihood of having a manic phase at some pointFawcett, especially if the first depression occurred before age twenty. Geller, Rao These two features–repeated recurrence, and early onset–are also included among the non-manic markers below: not enough to make a diagnosis, but suggestive, especially if they occur with several other such signs (even if “hypomania” is not detectable at all).
Depression with profound anxiety
Many people live with anxiety so severe, their depression is not the main problem. They seem to handle the periods of low energy, as miserable as they are. Often they sleep for 10, 12, even 14 hours a day during those times. But the part they can’t handle is the anxiety: it isn’t “good energy”. Many say they feel as though they just have too much energy pent up inside their bodies. They can’t sit still. They pace. And worst of all, their minds “race” with thoughts that go over and over the same thing to no purpose. Or they fly from one idea to the next so fast their thoughts become “unglued”, and they can’t think their way from A to C let alone A to Z.
When this is severe, people who enjoy books can find themselves completely unable to read: they just go over and over the same paragraph and it doesn’t “sink in”. They will get some negative idea in their head and go around and around with it until it completely dominates their experience of the world. Usually these “high negative energy” phases come along with severely disturbed sleep (see Depression with Severe Insomnia, below). Thoughts about suicide are extremely common and the risk may be high.Fawcett
Depressive episodes with irritable episodes
Many people with depression go through phases in which even they can recognize that their anger is completely out of proportion to the circumstance that started it. They “blow up” over something trivial. Those close to them are very well aware of the problem, of course. Many women can experience this as part of “PMS“. As their mood problems become more severe, they find themselves having this kind of irritability during more and more of their cycle. Similarly, when they get better with treatment, often the premenstrual symptoms are the “last to go”. Others can have this kind of cyclic irritability without any relationship to hormonal cycles. Many men with bipolar variations say they have problems with anger or rage.
Depression that doesn’t respond to antidepressants (or gets worse, or “poops out”)
Many people have repeated episodes of depression. Sometimes the first several episodes respond fairly well to antidepressant medication, but after a while the medications seem to “stop working”. For others, no antidepressant ever seems to work. And others find that some antidepressants seem to make them feel terrible: not just mild side effects, but severe reactions, especially severe agitation. These people feel like they’re “going crazy”. Usually at this time they also have very poor sleep. Many people have the odd experience of feeling the depression actually improve with antidepressants, yet overall —perhaps even months later —they somehow feel worse overall. In most cases this “worse” is due to agitation, irritability, and insomnia.
In some cases, an antidepressant works extremely well at first, then “poops out”.Byrne The benefits usually last several weeks, often months, and occasionally even years before this occurs. When this occurs repeatedly with different antidepressants, that may mark a “bipolar” disorder even when little else suggests the diagnosis.Sharma
Depression with periods of severe insomnia
Finally, there are people with depression whose most noticeable symptom is severe insomnia. These people can go fordays with 2-3 hours of sleep per night. Usually they fall asleep without much delay, but wake up 2-4 hours later and the rest of the night, if they get any more sleep at all, is broken into 15-60 minute segments of very restless, almost “waking” sleep. Dreams can be vivid, almost real. They finally get up feeling completely unrested. Note that this is not “decreased need for sleep” (the Bipolar I pattern). These people want desperately to sleep better and are very frustrated.
Non-manic markers of bipolarity? Even with no hypomania at all?
You have probably figured it out by now: making a diagnosis of bipolar disorder can be pretty tricky sometimes! You’re about to read a list of eleven more factors that have been associated with
bipolar disorder. None of these factors “clinches” the diagnosis. They are suggestive of bipolarity, but not sufficient to establish it. They are best regarded as markers which suggest considering bipolar disorder as a possible explanation for symptoms. They are not a scoring system, where you might think “the more I have of these, the more likely it is that I have bipolar disorder.” That way of thinking about these factors has not been tested.
Here’s the list of items which are found with bipolar disorder more often than you would expect by chance alone. These factors are well accepted. (e.g. International Society for Bipolar Disorders reviews: Mitchell et al; Phelps et al). The particular list below is adapted from a landmark article by Drs. Ghaemi and Goodwin and Ko. (Drs. Goodwin and Ghaemi are among the most respected authorities on bipolar diagnosis in the world. This important article is online).
- The patient has had repeated episodes of major depression (four or more; seasonal shifts in mood are also common).
- The first episode of major depression occurred before age 25 (some experts say before age 20, a few before age 18; most likely, the younger you were at the first episode, the more it is that bipolar disorder, not “unipolar”, was the basis for that episode).
- A first-degree relative (mother/father, brother/sister, daughter/son) has a diagnosis of bipolar disorder.
- When not depressed, mood and energy are a bit higher than average, all the time (“hyperthymic personality”).
- When depressed, symptoms are “atypical”: extremely low energy and activity; excessive sleep (e.g. more than 10 hours a day); mood is highly reactive to the actions and reactions of others; and (the weakest such sign) appetite is more likely to be increased than decreased. Some experts think that carbohydrate craving and night eating are variants of this appetite effect.
- Episodes of major depression are brief, e.g. less than 3 months.
- The patient has had psychosis (loss of contact with reality) during an episode of depression.
- The patient has had severe depression after giving birth to a child (“postpartum depression“).
- The patient has had hypomania or mania while taking an antidepressant (remember, severe
irritability, difficulty sleeping, and agitation may — but do not always — qualify for “hypomania”). - The patient has had loss of response to an antidepressant (sometimes called “Prozac Poop-out”): it worked well for a while then the depression symptoms came back, usually within a few months.
- Three or more antidepressants have been tried, and none worked.
Bipolarity with no hypomania at all? (!)
There is a very radical idea buried in the above 11 items, which we should look at before going on. But be aware that this idea is likely be dismissed with a “hmmmph” by many practicing psychiatrists. The idea is this: Dr. Ghaemi and colleagues propose that there might be a version of “bipolar disorder” that does not have any mania at all, not even hypomania. They call it “bipolar spectrum disorder”.
This is strange, you are saying to yourself. “Don’t you have to have some hypomania in order to be bipolar? How could it be ‘bi’ – polar if there is no other pole!?”
But Dr. Ghaemi and colleagues assert that there are versions of depression that end up acting more like bipolar disorder, even though there is no hypomania at all that we can detect (or, as in item #9, only when an antidepressant has been used). These conditions often do not respond well, in the long run, to antidepressant medications (which “poop out” or actually start making things worse). They respond better to the medications we routinely rely on in bipolar disorder, the “mood stabilizers” you’ll be introduced to in the Treatment section of this website (including several non-medication approaches). And these patients have other folks in their family with bipolar disorder or something that looks rather more like that (e.g. dramatic “mood swings”, even if the person never really gets ill enough to need treatment).
In Dr. Ghaemi’s description, then, there are people whose depression looks so “unipolar” that even a “fine-toothed comb” approach to looking for hypomania will not identify their depression as part of the “bipolar spectrum”. According to Ghaemi and colleagues, these people should be regarded as “bipolar”, in a sense, because of the way they will end up responding to treatment. In other words, there is something in these people which doesn’t look like our old idea of bipolar disorder, or even our newer idea of bipolar disorder (bipolar II, etc.), but will still better describe their future and the medications that are most likely to help them.
Remember that this is the very purpose of “diagnosis”, to describe the likely outcomes with and without treatment, and to identify effective treatments. So, on that basis, it seems reasonable to include these patients on the “bipolar spectrum”, like this:

The idea that someone can “have” bipolar disorder and yet not have any hypomania at all is not widely understood. You probably would get blank looks from most psychiatrists if you mention it, and frank disbelief from nearly all primary care doctors, who don’t have time to read the literature on the diagnosis of bipolar disorder. So, if you mention this idea to anyone, be prepared for some serious resistance.
Here’s some ammunition for you (nice soft paper bullets…) . As of 2005 the Harvard-associated Mood Disorder program started using this approach to diagnosis. They call it the Bipolarity Index.
More: Other researchers are also beginning to use the same framework of thought. For example, one research group just reported that patients with migraine headaches are much more likely to have these bipolar spectrum traits.Oedgaard(Migraines are much more common in patients with unipolar and Bipolar II than in Bipolar I, interestingly.Fasmer) One recent summary article for primary care doctors, about bipolar disorder, discusses these “soft signs” in considerable detail.Swann
More: The concept of a bipolar “spectrum” is supported by work from a research group calling themselves the Spectrum Project.e.g.Cassano
More? Consider the sources. Dr. Ghaemi was the chairman of the Committee on Diagnosis for the International Society for Bipolar Disorder. His co-author is Dr. Frederick Goodwin, who wrote the “bible” of bipolar disorder for our lifetime (Manic-Depressive Illness, with Dr. Kay Jamison). These are highly respected researchers amongst mood experts. Dr. Ghaemi emphasizes the need to rely on evidence in all his papers on diagnosis and treatment and is very frequently cited by other authors on this topic. You’ll see quite a few references to him on this website. But he is certainly not the only such voice, as I hoped you’ve noticed from all the references linked so far.
Anxious depression could be “bipolar”?
Yes, in Mixed States
An international group of expertsISBD described anxiety in bipolar disorder thus:
- General hyperarousal
- Inner tension
- Irritability /impatience
- Agitation
- “Frantically anxious”
These symptoms are not generally regarded as symptoms of bipolar disorder. Unfortunately, the very name “bi-polar” is misleading. As noted above by Dr. Jamison, mania can be negative as often as it is positive. The “racing thoughts” can have a very negative focus, especially self-criticism. The high energy can be experienced as a severe agitation, to the point where people feel they must pace the floor for hours at a time. Sleep problems can show up as insomnia: an inabilityto sleep, a desperate wish to be able to sleep to get out of the agitated state.
One way to understand these states is called “mixed states”. Bipolar disorder is an unfortunate name, as it implies a North/South Pole experience. A better picture looks like this graph:

Both manic symptoms and depressive symptoms at the same time? Sure enough. Not intuitive, if you think North/South pole. But these symptoms can vary independently or occur together (For more on that, see mixed states as waves of depression, anxiety, and normal time.)
This is not controversial. Mixed states were officially recognized in the 1994 version of the DSM, and expanded to look more like the graph above in the 2013 version.
What’s the difference between “anxious depression” and a bipolar mixed state? Not enough to easily be able to tell them apart, unfortunately. The same group of experts quoted above also said: “some but not all agitated depressed states are bipolar.”ISBD
Worst of all, mixed states can be caused by antidepressants.ISBD Yet antidepressants are what depressed patients commonly receive, of course.right? But some of those depressed folks have bipolar depression. The antidepressants can take them from pure depression to agitated depression. The good news is that slowly coming off the antidepressant is one way to address anxiety.Phelps Don’t do that on your own, of course. Here are some guidelines on stopping antidepressants in bipolar disorder.
Bottom line here: bipolar disorder is complicated, much more complex than “bipolar” (North/South) implies. Anxious depression can be bipolar. Tense, irritable agitation can be bipolar disorder. For more, see the Anxiety and Bipolar page.
What does hypomania feel like? How short or long?
It’s true that hypomania is a milder version of mania — just how mild, you’ll see in a moment. Mind you, Bipolar II is not a milder version of Bipolar I, though it is very often described that way, to my utter dismay. The suicide rate in Bipolar II is the same or higher than the rate for Bipolar I, for example.Dunner So the BP II version is definitely not a “mild” illness. The depression phases are as bad as in BP I, and often more common (that is, they occur more frequently and represent a more dominant part of the person’s life).
Nevertheless, hypomania can indeed by subtle, certainly by comparison with full mania, as shown in this graph (fromSmith and Ghaemi). Here are the symptoms which people with clear-cut hypomania actually experience — and how often. For example, at the bottom of the graph you see that nearly 100% of people with hypomania will have an increase in their activity. By comparison, optimism is prominent only about 70% of the time in hypomania.

As you can see, these “symptoms” are not clearly abnormal. Everyone experiences these feelings from time to time. When they are extreme; and when they show up over and over again in cycles of mood/energy change; when they are accompanied by other signs of bipolarity, such as phases of depression; that’s when we should think of this as “abnormal”, or at least as warranting caution if someone wants to treat those depressed phases with an antidepressant.
However, hypomania is not always positive. Just as manic phases can be very negative (so-called “dysphoric mania”), hypomania also can be very unpleasant. Here is an example of how hypomania can change from a positive experience to a very negative one (from a blogger who wrote eloquently about bipolarity).
First, the positive phase:
Increased energy. A extraordinary feeling of happiness with myself and the world. A very loving feeling towards the people I care about. An uncommon ability to get things done. A huge burst of energy from the moment I awaken until I go to bed. An expanded ability to multi-task. An organizational acuity that is second to none. A willingness to engage with people. A desire to spend more time with people I care about–and even those I don’t.
Then, the negative phase of hypomania (still pretty subtle):
I start feeling burned out. While I still have a lot of energy, I don’t have that “I love the world” feeling. If I’ve been playing my Autoharp at my mother’s assisted living facility, and jumping up and down to help all the participants turn the pages and stay with me, I suddenly feel that the staff should be more helpful in doing this.
… things don’t just slide off my back. While I try not to “snap” back at people, I am not always successful. I am certainly less willing to ignore things that days or weeks earlier wouldn’t have bothered me at all.
I become far less happy, joyful, and kind. I dislike being criticized in any which way.
How short or long can an episode be?
For hypomania, officially the answer is “four days” (DSM). But in real life, it’s very clear that episodes can be shorter, and that’s greed upon by nearly all mood experts I’ve ever heard. They might disagree whether we should shorten the required duration in the DSM, as that would “admit” a lot more people into the bipolar camp which is already a controversial issue. But no one really seems to think that a hypomanic episode lasting only 3 days instead of four is anything other than hypomania; it just doesn’t “meet criteria”, that’s all.
Indeed, a recent studyBauer showed that episodes lasting as little as one day are common. So don’t get hung up on length of episodes as an issue if you’re trying to figure out if you “have bipolar disorder” or not. Remember, that’s the wrong question anyway… Instead, ask “how bipolar are you?” as affirmed in a recent editorial Smith in the British Journal of Psychiatry (one of the biggies…).
What does bipolar depression actually feel like?
Theoretically, bipolar depression is exactly the same as “unipolar” or straight Major Depression. Theoretically, you can’t distinguish between the two, so you can’t tell if someone has bipolar disorder just by looking at their depressions.
But I think there is a different quality to the depressions that people with bipolar disorder experience, because beforethey start feeling sad and having difficulty experiencing pleasure from their usual activities, they very often have problems with energy. To emphasize this I’d just like you to look at this list of symptoms which people with bipolar disorder said they have when they’re just starting to get depressed.
If you think “that’s me!”, careful: this does not mean you have bipolar depressions. But it might help to see what people with bipolar disorder have said about their experience. I don’t hear about these symptoms so much when people have a more purely “unipolar” — not bipolar — depression.

(from Lobban and colleagues, 2011)
Granted, people in this study also endorsed “loss of interest in activities” and “feeling sad, wanting to cry” but those are typical symptoms in official “Major Depression”. And low energy can also be seen in Major Depression. But look at how prominent low energy is in this study. I think this might be telling us something about the nature of bipolar depression. Certainly matches what I hear from patients.
Finally, the original intent of this list was to help people identify symptoms that mark the beginning of another episode of depression. You might find it useful in that respect also.
Overdiagnosis?
I hope it may now make sense to you to think of mood symptoms as falling on a continuum between plain depression and “depression plus”, the far end of which is Bipolar I, with many variations falling in between.
If you are wondering whether what you’ve just read is “mainstream” or “fringe” (that’s a good thing to wonder), you’ll find the same “spectrum” concept coming from the head of the Harvard Bipolar Clinic, in this 2005 interview: Sachs.
By contrast, sticking to the DSM rules, you’ll hear that bipolar disorder is overdiagnosed (the most widely cited paperalso shows a notable underdiagnosis rate as well, by the way. Here is a close examination of their findings. ) They’re right: bipolar disorder is overdiagnosed, if one sticks to the DSM rules. But psychiatry is moving beyond that rigid approach; here are more examples of that movement.
At least one thing is clear: when there’s a question, you’ll be better off if you understand more about “bipolarity”, as you have done here. You are an important part of the diagnostic process.
Is there a test for bipolar disorder?
Not exactly, but…
This used to be simple. When “manic” only meant one thing (classic mania) one could ask “have you ever had a manic episode?” and many people knew what was being asked:
- Mood much better than normal
- Rapid speech
- Little need for sleep
- Racing thoughts, trouble concentrating
- Continuous high energy
- Overconfidence
- Loss of contact with reality (delusions)
As you now know, this list looks for obvious mania. It misses all the complexity we have just discussed. What you might be wanting is a “no way!” bipolar test. Something to provide a clear
statement, like: “no, you don’t have it, or anything like it”. Or you might be looking for the opposite: “you definitely have bipolar II”. Sorry, that is not possible, but please read on.
On other websites you’ll find a test called the Mood Disorders Questionnaire (MDQ) which is supposed to give you a “yes or no” answer. But another test came along after the MDQ which is better suited to looking for subtle versions of bipolar II.Ghaemi
Think about it: if by this point on this website you’re saying to yourself “that’s me!”, which some people do, then you really don’t need some test to tell you that you should go ahead and learn more about treatment. On the other hand, if someone else thinks you might have it, but you don’t think you do, is a test result going to make a difference to you? If so, go ahead and take one of these tests.
Family or friends could “take the test”, answering as if they were you, on the basis of what they’ve seen you do or heard you say. And then they could gently wonder out loud if perhaps the test might mean something, who knows, no one can tell for sure, but darn it sure seems like your life is a struggle sometimes, wow, what if there was a tool out there that would make life a bit smoother sometimes, not even necessarily a medication treatment, oh well, just thinking about this, of course you’d want to decide for yourself, not for me to say of course, etc. etc.
The Support Team @
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