This is Part 1 in a 5-Part Series:
"When the World is Too Bright: An Intensive
View of Mania from On the Ground"
This is my fifth mania in the nine years since I have
been diagnosed with bipolar disorder. However, just because this is my fifth
mania doesn’t mean that the experience of the mania this time around hasn’t
been rough. I have been manic every year since 2013. Yup. 2013. 2014. 2015. And
now 2016. My mania manifests pretty
similarly each episode. For instance, I typically experience heightened
creativity and productivity, a heightened libido, impulsivity, spending sprees,
weight loss, loss of appetite, and sleep disturbances.
The
creativity and productivity feel incredible. I feel an intense need to create
when I am manic. During my third mania (in 2014), I started blogging about my
mental health journey. During my fourth (in 2015), I began a memoir and founded
two companies. However, this creativity and productivity are not without their
share of problems for me. When I first started blogging, I encountered boundary
issues with what and whom I wrote about. The two companies I founded set me
back about $8,000 in incorporation costs and website creations. I also shop
more. Over the life course of my disorder, I have charged around $30,000 on my
credit cards. I am currently still in credit card debt. Thus, the temporary
nature of my manic episodes have long-lasting consequences for me.
Yet,
this is the first manic episode that did not result in a hospitalization. In
the past, mania meant being hospitalized. My manias take me so high, so quickly
that in order to head it off at the pass, I check myself into the hospital. But
for my current manic episode, I am managing with IOP (Intensive Outpatient
Program) only. I attend IOP two days per week for 3.5 hours each day.
During
this current episode, I got the idea to re-brand my life coaching company as a
wellness company focused on promoting self-care. I stayed up all night writing
feverishly and researching best practices for self-care for the company. I became
really excited because I discovered that I could turn what I once perceived as
a manic financial blunder – starting a life coaching company in the first place
- into a viable source of income. It was almost confirmation that my manic-self
knew something my stable-self did not. However, once I was not sleeping through
the night, I knew I was in trouble.
I knew the excitement I was
experiencing was more than just normal excitement. I was less vigilant than
normal about having symptoms of mania because it was not springtime. All of my
previous manias occurred between the months of February and June. Now, in
September 2016, I exhibited symptoms. I didn’t know what to make of this change
to my norm.
In
response to the appearance of symptoms of mania, I increased the number of
acupuncture sessions I received from once every three weeks, to two to three
sessions per week. I also started taking my medicine consistently once again.
Since the summer, I had been inconsistently adhering to my psychiatric medicine
routines for various reasons - chief among them, I am just tired of taking pills.
I have been a compliant patient ever since I learned of my diagnosis. With the
exception of my first mania and my current manic episode, my manias are
generally caused by medicine changes my psychiatrist ordered (e.g. one medicine
caused liver toxicity so I had to come off it). However, this current mania is
my fault and I can definitely say “lesson learned.” As a result of my veering
from my medicine routine, I have added an additional year to my graduate
schooling since I am currently enrolled less than half-time. There will be no
more inconsistent medicine usage on my part.
Tune in tomorrow for part two in the series...
Tune in tomorrow for part two in the series...
Your health and safety should always be the priority. Seek professional guidance, use licensed pharmacies, and explore safer alternatives to manage anxiety. Remember, taking shortcuts by purchasing controlled substances online without proper authorization can have serious consequences. Stay informed, stay safe, and choose the right path for your well-being.
ReplyDeletebuy klonopin online overnight cod