I’ve been depressed three times and manic three times. But I have only been hospitalized during the manias. I’ve had a 17-day stay, then a 10-day stay, followed by a 5-day stay. The three hospitalizations have been over the course of the last eight years. During my hospital stays, I've found that most people there are admitted for depression or age-related illnesses like dementia. I have been the only manic person each time.
For me, my manias have been a lot worse than my depressions.
I have Bipolar Disorder Type I. What distinguishes type I from type II is the mania;
hypomania, a lesser form of mania, defines type II, among other features. WebMD says:
People with bipolar I disorder experience full episodes of mania -- the often severe abnormally elevated mood and behavior described above. These manic symptoms can lead to serious disruptions in life (for example, spending the family fortune, or having an unintended pregnancy).
In bipolar II disorder, the symptoms of elevated mood never reach full-blown mania. They often pass for extreme cheerfulness, even making someone a lot of fun to be around -- the "life of the party." Not so bad, you might think -- except bipolar II disorder usually involves extensive and disabling periods of significant depression, which can often be harder to treat than if episodes of hypomania had never occurred.
When
I am manic, I am super creative and productive. Ideas come to me easily and
often. Ideas about career paths, writing topics, and projects. When I
am manic, I spend uncontrollably, racking up thousands upon thousands of
dollars on my credit cards. When I am manic, I sleep and eat less than normal.
When I am manic, I lose weight. When I am manic, I talk extremely fast. In short, the mania is wholly
disruptive to my normal routine.
Jessie, from Saved By the Bell, saying: "I'm so excited!"
My last manic episode occurred in June 2014, mere months
ago. Since then, I've returned to "normal", but over the past month I’ve felt the stirrings of mania. I’ve been
speaking quickly. I’ve been posting more to social media. I’ve been a bit
grandiose. Thankfully, I have not spent any money. I’m still digging out of the
tens of thousands of dollars I charged this past summer. But still my sleep has been off.
I’ve had sleep issues since the
depression set in in June 2013 (the depression would last a year; insomnia is a
common symptom) and it hasn’t reverted back to normal despite me being in a
stable mood. I was on Lunesta, a prescription sleeping pill, for the past fourteen
months. However, over the past two weeks I have stopped the Lunesta and am now
taking Melatonin, an over-the-counter supplement recommended by my psychiatrist. The Lunesta caused intense grogginess. The morning after
taking Lunesta I would lie in bed for too many hours of the day, halfway
between sleep and wakefulness. I cannot be productive in a permanent state of
grogginess and tiredness. The Melatonin has been working okay. But I still wake
frequently during the night and I wake super early in the morning. I’m not sure
if this sleep pattern is my new normal. Fortunately, my psychiatrist is aware of all of
this and is keeping an eye on my mood.In short, I have to be careful with my sleep. Keeping consistent sleep hours and getting adequate amounts of sleep is crucial to stave off both depression and mania.
I was out of town at a conference this week. The entire week
I was there I had anxiety around my sleep. Lying in bed, I would be thinking
about the following: how long will it take me to fall asleep, will I fall
asleep, will I be rested in the morning, and will I wake up (thoughts of
mortality frighten me from time to time). Mid-panic attack, I called my
boyfriend to process the experience. Trying to console me, he offered some
suggestions. After hanging up, I did some deep breathing to calm myself down. I
believe I fell asleep not too long after. However the next day, when my friends
asked me how I was feeling, as I would be presenting a workshop later that day,
I shared my anxiety around my sleep and started to cry. Heightened emotions are
also a sign of mania for me. One of my friends present who was at the conference with
me is also my acupuncturist. Thankfully she was around. She gave me a quick acupressure
session and I did some deep breathing and all was right in my world again.
I’m not sure if I’m headed for a manic episode or not, but
to be proactive I will be: increasing the frequency of my acupuncture
appointments from once every three weeks to once per week for the next month or
so and I
have appointments with both my psychiatrist and therapist soon. I will also
keep to my normal schedule and routine as much as possible.
I’ve written about how I generally love the mania, but I’m
not sure that the mania loves me back. I mean, I’m super productive when manic. This
summer alone: I started two blogs, wrote a proposal for a charter school, wrote
a curriculum for a mental wellness presentation, applied to graduate school for
social work, and started a memoir. Yup. I did all of that in three months. But
the mania is very disruptive and expensive for me. Not to mention, exhausting -- as
I’m sure you can imagine.
I would appreciate not being manic again for a long time to
come.
Note: My title is an homage to Ellen Forney’s captivating
graphic memoir (comic book memoir) about living and working with bipolar
disorder. Check it out: Marbles: Mania, Depression, Michelangelo, and Me.
Thank you for sharing. For anyone suffering from depression, I always recommend the Destroy Depression system which just may have saved my life.http://inersche.com/2015/03/13/how-i-overcame-my-depression/. It was written by a man who cured his own depression naturally, and it simply teaches 7 steps which help to eliminate depression from your life.
ReplyDeleteThank you for reading and commenting! You know what, every article I read about depression and/or bipolar, someone (often times multiple people) will mention that book. I'll check it out now. Thanks for recommending!
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