This is Part 5 in a 5-Part Series:
"When the World is Too Bright: An Intensive View of Mania from On the Ground"
Dear Future Manic Krystal,
Mania and you go together like peanut butter and jelly.
After five manias in nine years, it seems pretty inevitable. And this is okay.
You have learned how to cope and manage with the episodes. You have a system in
place. You have the support, encouragement, and help of loved ones. You are not
alone, Darling.
So don’t fear future manic episodes. Yes, an episode can be
a bit scary because you don’t know how high you’ll get or how destructive it will
be. But, Baby, you’ve lived through this before. Let me remind you. Five.
Times. 2007. 2013. 2014. 2015. 2016. If you’ve noticed, the last four years
have been particularly challenging for you with multiple manias and
hospitalizations. But guess what? This mania, you managed without the hospital.
This is the first time you have ever accomplished this. This, Baby, is
progress. You are learning and growing and maturing in how you handle and
manage the mania.
Just relish this for a moment: you are manic but you are not
in the hospital. That is huge! Even your therapist recognized it in your last
session. You have managed by coordinating care with your psychiatrist, your
therapist, and IOP (Intensive Outpatient Program). You have recognized, yet
again, how important your psychotropic drugs are to your mental and mood
stability. Some people can manage without medicine. You are not one of those
people. And that’s okay! Really. It is. Everyone is an individual so why wouldn’t
their needs be individualized, too?
I think you charged about $5,000. But even that is progress.
Let’s celebrate every milestone. Considering that in the past you have charged
upwards of $10,000 at a time, $5,000 isn’t too
bad. Keep it in perspective. Do not beat yourself up. Despite the high
balances, your credit score is over 740. Just recognize that spending sprees
come with the territory. In the future though, please give your credit cards to
your accountability partner.
Despite the spending, the mania is not an all-bad
experience. During your fourth mania (2015), you incorporated two businesses. During
this, your fifth mania (2016), you managed to make one of the businesses into something
beautiful. You turned the life coaching company you incorporated into a
wellness coaching company. While manic, you wrote three curricula for the
company, planned a strategic and targeted audience to market to, met with a
small business mentor, solicited feedback from your friends and social media
contacts via a Google Form survey, and worked with an incredible graphic
designer to create a company-specific logo and forthcoming website. In short,
you got a lot done. And it’s great work. The creativity and productivity worked
in your favor. Yeah, you barely slept and you literally worked around the clock
but you created something permanent and important.
Lastly, the mania is not a curse. I know you used to feel
like your diagnosis was a source of suffering. But, Darling, do not take such a
negative view of the mania. You do not suffer from bipolar disorder; you live with bipolar disorder. You happen to get
manic more than you get depressed. Thus, your default mood is slightly more elevated
than the average person. That is okay. You are you. Relish in your uniqueness.
Bipolar, and mania in particular, have granted you some amazing gifts.
Appreciate them. Gifts such as being able to tell your story through blogging, connecting
with an international readership, meeting incredible women of color in your
social media support group, starting a memoir, and choosing to re-learn to
speak Spanish.
Be proactive; choose how you see the cup. Is it half full or
half empty? Your outlook on life actually shapes your experiences of life. To live with bipolar disorder is not the worst thing. Always remember that, Darling.
Love,
Your current hypomanic/manic self (2016)