the susie solution

Posts Tagged ‘mental illness

There’s a commercial for some depression medicine that shows the victim being followed around and overshadowed by a large black cloud. I don’t care for most drug commercials (most commercials, period, I guess), but this one I actually like because in the “after” portrayal, where the drug is working great and the person is out living life again, the cloud is still there. It’s smaller in size, and follows along meekly and unobtrusively, but it’s there.

That’s the plain truth about mental illness. You may be able to treat it and make it manageable, but it will never go away. It will always be lurking, waiting in the wings for a cue to make another grand entrance and steal the show.
I’ve put off writing this for some time now. I probably should have written some of it last Fall. I kept hoping things would right themselves, but they haven’t, so I think it will be better write and get it over with.
Simply put, the bipolar Monster has resurged.
It could be that my head med is simply losing effectiveness; the body metabolizes all psychotropics differently over time, causing them to become less effective. However, my new med manager believes that it isn’t really the med’s fault, but that chronic stress of the last two years has sent my cortisol levels sky-high so that it is now stuck in a cycle it can’t get out of – and that the high levels of cortisol are overwhelming my head med’s ability to work as it should.
There are a multitude of factors involved in the stress. Residual effects from the year of dealing with my mom during her death from cancer. Relational difficulties in my marriage. Caregiving issues involving my cousin, and dealing with her son. My already touchy musculoskeletal issues because of my screwy spine were badly affected by a fall in September of 2013, but exercise and physical therapy for it pretty much went out the window during the year of caring for Mama; last year the injuries were compounded by other mishaps; and now the whole thing has been topped off by degenerating cervical and lumbar discs, which may (probably) mean I will never again be able to achieve the kind of physical fitness I was able to enjoy for one brief year prior to my 2013 injury. Since exercise plays a key part in helping with a number of my other health issues, losing the ability to do so as much affects them all. In addition, I have been having severe sleep issues for months now, leaving me physically exhausted.
In general, all this has meant increasing problems keeping things together. Some weeks, I am an emotional basket case, depressed and overwhelmed and scared. When it’s like that, it takes enormous amounts of energy to carry on reasonably normally with other people, leaving me emotionally exhausted. Then the switch flips, and I’m more even emotionally, and it’s not quite such an effort. But between the physical and emotional stresses, I find myself struggling with finding the motivation to do that which I know I need to or should. Often, it just takes too much energy to care.
As the Monster grows, my brain once again is like a dozen racetracks with a dozen greyhounds on each, and all chasing a dozen rabbits running loose. It is difficult to follow any one train of thought for long. I have been trying and trying to write blog posts – I have a dozen started – but I get partway through and realize that I can’t figure out where I am going with it. I have spent hour after hour re-writing and re-writing, but so far, I have gained little ground. The frustration is enormous.
Not only is my brain racing, it has no “off” switch. Ever have a night where you just can’t get to sleep because your brain is absorbed with some problem? My brain can’t shut up. Ever. My meds to help me sleep are having little effect. No matter how tired my body is, my brain is always in high gear, running this way and that. What sleep I do get is broken multiple times a night – beginning again the battle to get my brain to shut up so I can return to some semblance of sleep. When I DO sleep, I mostly dream. I have always had vivid dreams, in color, and often I remember the gist of, or much of, the contents upon waking up. Now, even when asleep, I am often dreaming that I am awake. Not uncommonly, some of my dreams are disturbing, even somewhat traumatic. When I get up in the morning, I seldom have any sense of having really slept at all – certainly not any refreshing sleep, at any rate. Chronic sleep deprivation does a real number on ya.
So, rather than playing around any further with my BP meds, the plan is to focus on other issues through other practitioners. I will see a naturopath to do some detective work and figure out what might be helpful, for the cortisol issue in highest priority, but with any other area he finds out-of-whack as well. (My case being rather extraordinarily complicated medically, it will be no simple knot to untangle!) I will be getting traction at my chiropractor’s office, as well as massage. I will be starting with a new counselor on the 23rd – the wife of the counselor Rob started seeing in January; the eventual goal is joint counseling. Hopefully it won’t take too many months to start getting things turned around – and then we can tell if I need to do anything with my head meds or not.
And in case you’re thinking none of this sounds very spiritual, be assured that no, I have not left God out of the equation, and yes, I HAVE had people pray over me and I know there are many praying on-going. But mental illness is not a spiritual problem, and unless God makes a miraculous intervention – which is possible, but not historically terribly frequent – spiritual activities such as prayer and throwing Bible verses at it don’t solve it or even make it feel better. My faith is a fact, but when the Monster has the upper hand, my faith has no meaning to my feelings. The spirit is willing, but the brain is broken. That’s the best I can explain it.
All of this is not to ask for sympathy, comments, “I’m so sorry”, “I’m praying for you” or even any particular expressed reaction at all. I don’t mean to sound ungracious, but I take all those as read from those who know me, and I DO appreciate it – but it takes energy to respond, and right now I don’t always have any to spare. (If you are a local, you don’t need to treat me like I’m fragile.)  I just want to explain what’s going on and give you another glimpse into the Wonderful World of Bipolar. So if I’m less than gracious, or I’m grouchy or a bit short-tempered, or get too worked up over little things, or don’t seem to be enthusiastic about something you want me to be enthused about, or seem tired or down and gloomy, please just let it be and don’t take it personally! And if I don’t write for months, or if what I write kind of wanders around, bear with me.
It is well with my soul, but as for the rest of me, for now, the Monster has the upper hand again.

First, a word to all who read this blog. I started this blog mostly as a way to get all the words that kept tumbling ‘round and ‘round inside my head OUT of my head.  I knew my mom would read my posts and probably share the blog with her friends, if only because her “baby” wrote it – moms are like that. I expected that some of my friends would read it because, well, they’re my friends, but I honestly wasn’t sure what to expect as to whether anyone ELSE would consider it worthwhile to read.  It is validating, exhilarating, frightening and humbling to find that there are those who do.  For each of you, I am grateful.  If you like any post, the greatest compliment you can pay me is to share it with others, whether by FB, email, or print.  (However you share it, please include the link to the blog site and my name as author.)  A word of thanks also to all of you who have sent or said words of encouragement.  I treasure them.  If you particularly like some point, or especially if you particularly disagree with some point, or question a conclusion, please do comment.  I would love for this to be more interactive and less of a monologue.  Now on to the post….

A few months ago there was a letter to the editor in our local paper complaining about people in parking lots who take handicapped parking places. The writer wasn’t complaining about cars without a handicap license plate or without a placard hanging from the rearview mirror.  No, she was complaining about those who HAVE those legal permissions but who “obviously” are healthy enough that they don’t NEED to use those parking places.

This isn’t a new accusation to those guilty of that “crime.” Although they are occasionally accosted directly in parking lots, more often they find themselves the recipients of dirty looks or nasty notes left on their windshield – or are the target of letters to the editor.  The frustration is that heart conditions such as congestive heart failure, lung conditions such as cystic fibrosis, muscle conditions such as fibromyalgia, joint conditions such as arthritis, along with many other conditions, can result in a severe limitation on stamina qualifying a person to use handicapped parking, but none affect the physical appearance.  Sometimes people end up not using the space they are legally entitled to use, no matter what it costs them physically, because they get tired of people accusing them.  It’s just easier to pretend to be what people assume you are.

Recently, I have talked with both the middle school and high school youth groups at church about my journey with The Monster, from the depression that started in high school to my diagnosis with bipolar in 2010, what life has been like since and what the future likely holds. I did a FB post about having to up my bipolar meds and asking friends to please clue me in if they notice anything amiss.  In all the cases, I received statements of commendation for speaking so candidly, for being “open” and “vulnerable”.  I appreciate the intention of being supportive and encouraging.  I do, truly.

Yet the fact that my speaking of these things is deemed to merit such note is … sad. It should not have to TAKE courage to speak up about being mentally ill.  Taking head meds should require no more self-consciousness than does taking insulin.  But the fact is that we mentally ill often feel that pressure to appear “normal” because we LOOK normal.  We can be afraid to “confess” our not-normalness and be moved from the “us” category to the “them”.

I have a laundry list of physical problems – hypothyroid, fibromyalgia, migraines, to name just the ones readers are most likely to be familiar with. I have had 13 major surgeries, I lost count of the MRIs, CTs, X-rays and ER visits years ago.  I have had a number of rare conditions pop up.  If there’s a highly unlikely way to react to a drug … I’ll do it.  (Do NOT tell me odds, please – my body takes it as a challenge!)  I have to take a whole pile of pills a day to stay functional.  I speak of these conditions without hesitation because they are my physical reality. I speak freely of my mental illness because it is just as much my physical reality.

In our society, though, this speaking of mental illness that casually is still uncommon enough that it gets noticed. Sadly, our churches are often no better than society when it comes to being places where mental illness can be disclosed and discussed with the same freedom and compassion that physical illnesses are.  In some ways, churches can be even worse, because not only may mental illnesses be misunderstood, they are often misunderstood in a manner that blames the victim: to wit, if we just prayed properly, or trusted God better, or turned our troubles over to God more completely – if somehow we just did something “right”, if somehow we were better Christians, we wouldn’t be sick. It’s the ultimate betrayal of compassion.

The fact is that while mental illness PRESENTS behaviorally, it is in origin an actual physical problem.  The brain is broken, wired wonky, chemically imbalanced so that certain areas of the brain are overactive while other areas are underactive.  Some neurons are firing grapeshot, others blanks, while others are jammed.  There are lapses in the synapses.  Mental illness can no more be willed away than can diabetes.  It can no more “faithed” away than ALS.  One can no more reason a way out of it than one could reason a way out of anaphylactic shock.  We mentally ill are generally the last to recognize what is going on with us – if we are even able to at all ; even if we are able to recognize it, we are still trapped by it.  An epileptic doesn’t stop taking her medication when her seizures are under control because she is able to reason that without the medication’s influence, the seizures will return.  We mentally ill may stop taking our meds once the symptoms are under control because our disease prevents us from grasping the fact that it is ONLY the medication that is keeping the disease at bay, not that WE are “better.”  We are at the mercy of a disease for which there may be treatment, but for which there no cure. This is our frightening reality.

So how does a congregation foster an environment of openness where those with mental illness need not fear speaking freely about it? First, we can start with the way we deal generally with negative emotions – sadness, “the blues”, non-clinical depression, anxiety.  If we are a safe place for expressing these, we will be – or can easily become – a safe place for being open about mental illness as well.  We can listen without criticism and validate feelings – that is, let people feel what they feel and be honest about it.  For example, say someone comes to church in a very blue phase, is asked, “Hey, how’s it going?”, and gives an honest answer.  A cheery, “Oh, come on, things can’t be THAT bad!” or “Smile, Jesus loves you!” or “Just think about all the blessings God has given you!” or a recitation of the things the responder does to cheer themselves up, all these, while certainly intended for good, actually send the message “You are not allowed to be anything but happy at church” –  the antithesis of openness. Responses such as, “I’m sorry to hear you’re feeling so sad”, or “That must be hard on you”, or “Then I’m extra glad you came today” sends a message that it’s ok to “come as you are.”  We can go beyond assuring someone “I’m praying for you” to asking them if there is something specific we can pray about, making a very personal effort to connect.  (And it certainly helps build that connection if we remember the next time we see the person to ask about that prayer item!)

Going farther, the pastor at my current church speaks frankly of his father who committed suicide twenty years ago. Pastor Brian also has had various congregation members share with the congregation their own stories of struggling with depression; as I mentioned, our youth pastor has done likewise. (I am only one of those who spoke.)  THAT is fostering openness.  At one church, we had a mentally ill homeless man who came regularly who sat in the front row and spent most of his time rocking rapidly into a deep bow back and forth.   Sometimes he talked to himself.  There were occasional complaints about him being “distracting”, and there’s no denying his activity was outside the sanctuary standard norm, but the majority of the congregation welcomed him anyway.  Someone would always sit by him to calm him if his agitation reached extremes.  Members would greet him by name after the service.  THAT is fostering openness.  One member there had a mental breakdown and spent 6 weeks hospitalized in the psych ward.  When she came back, people didn’t avoid her in embarrassment, but simply welcomed her back as from any other hospitalization, with loving concern and care.  THAT is fostering openness.   Any time we educate ourselves so that we are prepared better for how to respond to or deal with people with mental illness, any time we acknowledge our lack of knowledge but express our desire to better understand, we are working to create an environment of openness.

When we acknowledge the reality of mental illness as matter-of-factly as we do that of physical illness we move one step closer to letting not normal be normal.

 We can all be of One Mind – even if some of us are “out” of ours.

Imagine you are driving on a very, very wet freeway going 60 miles an hour, with traffic in every lane ahead, behind and beside you.  Suddenly you realize you are hydroplaning – your tires no longer in direct contact with the pavement, but instead floating on a cushion of compressed liquid.  You may need to stop – but find you can’t.  You may want to turn – but instead find yourself launching off the road.  You may want to go straight – but instead find yourself spinning ‘round and ‘round.  Until and unless your tires reconnect with the pavement, you are at the mercy of the laws of physics, utterly helpless.  If your tires have good tread, you may gain traction again fairly soon.  But if your tires are bald…..   Welcome to the world of bipolar.

Although I have mentioned a number of times in this blog that I have Bipolar 2, I’ve never talked about precisely what it is, or what it is like for me to live with it.  However, since my diagnosis happened three years ago today, this seems a good day to talk about it. 

My BP2 first evidenced itself in high school, but went unrecognized.  I was diagnosed manic-depressive by a psychologist at college, but after a few sessions to give me some coping strategies, I was sent on my way, and I thought I was “all better now.”  But although the particular presenting symptoms changed over time, I continued to struggle with what I felt was a monster inside me for over 30 years before being diagnosed and put on medication.  (Although the usual expectation is that it may take 18-36 months trying half a dozen or more meds before finding one that works well with the fewest side effects, it took only 6 months and the 3rd med I tried before we hit on a success that not only works very well but has no apparent side effects for me – for which I am exceedingly thankful!)  With my medication, things are very different now, but although the meds help, they don’t cure.  I will ALWAYS, short of a divine intervention, have BP2.  Meds put some tread on my tires, but it’s the difference between bald and barely legal.  And the pavement is always going to be wet; it’s just a matter of how deep the water is.  Skidding at any moment will always remain a real possibility.

Bipolar – BP – like most mental illness is a brain disorder that causes certain areas of the brain to become hyperactive, while others become under-active.  Why it happens is not known, although there is some genetic predisposition involved.   Bipolar is broken down into 2 levels.  Type 1 is the more commonly known version, and what most people think of when they hear the term bipolar; it is this version that ends up with patients doing horrific things that make headlines, although it is only a very, very small percentage of BP1 patients who commit such acts.  BP2 is a milder version that doesn’t go to the extremes BP1 does, a difference of scale rather than substance.   Like most mental illness, much of what either version goes through is not unlike what is known by the rest of humanity, but it is exaggerated far beyond the normal experience – far beyond what the normal coping mechanisms can deal with.  (Just as cancer takes a normal process, the growth of cells, and sends it wildly out of control with no “off” switch.)  One analogy for BP is to picture it like waves on an oscilloscope.   “Normal” (i.e. non-mentally-ill) folks have waves that go up and down, but they fluctuate only so far from the baseline norm.   The waves of a person with BP1 go way, way, way up and way, way, way down – from manic highs where she may not sleep for days, to suicidal depression.  The swings may take months, or moments.  For those of us with BP2, our symptoms and sufferings are the same as BP1 except that our waves don’t go all the way as high up or all the way as low down.  Our highs are exhilarating, but not manic, and although we may have periods of deep depression and even suicidal thoughts, we are not nearly as much at risk for actual suicide.  We generally tend to have more periods of relatively normal behavior than a BP1 as well.   

For normal people, moods tend to be influenced heavily by life circumstances (and influenced by personality, of course.)  If you have BP?  Forget it.  You’re stuck with the mood swing gumball machine – “oooo, what mood did you get today?”  For some with BP, the swings happen slowly, and the stay in a mood may last months or even years; for others, the swings are mercurial.   The causation of our moods may have little or no correlation with our life circumstances, but our moods have an overwhelming influence on our perspective on those circumstances.  We don’t need anything to be depressed “about”; but when we’re depressed, as in any other depression, everything in our life will be a cause for despair because that will be the lens our brain is looking through.  Highs are just as unrelated to life as are our lows, but when we’re up, then EVERYthing is wonderful and beautiful and we can do anything.  (Although highs are exhilarating and can, admittedly, be rather fun, and bring on periods of tremendous creativity and inspiration, they are just as much a problem as lows because they are still warping our perception of reality.)

But mood swings are only a part of the package.  They’re the most obvious, and certainly the symptom most likely for even a layperson to identify, but there’s much more to BP.  The area of the brain that is involved affects other aspects of thinking and emotions.  Although the precise constellation of symptoms will be different in every patient, they tend to be differing expressions of things that are common among us. 

The BP brain has difficulties with impulse control.  It is common for BP patients to be in constant financial trouble because they cannot resist buying anything they see that they want.  Substance abuse of all kinds is common, as are gambling and risk-taking adrenaline rush activities.  Many BPs are sexually promiscuous – even those who find it morally repugnant.   We may tend to say inappropriate things, since the filter agent in our brains isn’t working. 

The BP brain may fire thoughts and impulses that are weird at best, if not downright disturbing.  Thoughts of self-harming are common.  I don’t mean like those who deliberately hurt themselves as a physical expression of emotional pain, but simply as in random thoughts like wondering, as one is chopping up an onion, “What would it feel like if I put my fingers under the knife?”  Driving down the freeway, one may find oneself thinking, “What if I ran into that concrete barrier?”  Part of why I have an extreme aversion to standing on the edge of cliffs or on bridges is because I fight with the impulse to throw things off – my glasses, my camera, my purse.  The baby in my arms.   If you don’t understand BP, it’s easy to think that these thoughts arise out of some kind of subconscious desire to do harm, or a latent intent to do evil, but they don’t.  They come because our brain is broken and synapses fire in odd ways.  It’s that simple.  Only an exceedingly small minority of us with BP will ever act on any of those thoughts.  (For the record, I’ve never thrown actually anything off a cliff or bridge.)   It is as disturbing to us to have these thoughts as it is to you to think about having such thoughts.

In sleep, the brain sometimes gets even worse.  In our dreams, we may DO those things that are mere impulses we can dismiss in the day.  (This next is the hardest for me to write, but it was one of the greatest reliefs when I found out it was BP-related; there may be someone reading this who needs to know it, too.)  It’s not uncommon to have dreams that violate every moral value you hold and leave you blushing and humiliated and that may make it hard to interact with someone the next day while your brain is trying to sort out what was dream from what is reality.  You KNOW that the other person has no idea what you dreamt, but, still…   If you’re embarrassed to read that, think of how embarrassing it is to have those dreams – and how easy it is, if you don’t understand BP, to think of yourself as somehow evil and dirty for having such dreams, as if they arise from some subconscious desire.  But again, it’s a broken brain, not a moral failing.

The BP brain tends to fixate, like being on a hamster wheel: once you get going on a particular thought track, it can be virtually impossible for you to get off that wheel.  You may succeed in distracting yourself for a time while you do some task – making dinner, planning shopping, reading a book – but as soon as you are no longer engaged in that other, BAM! You’re right back on that hamster wheel as if you’d never left.   Hurts, frustrations, problems at home or work or church – anything and everything is a potential hamster wheel.  When we sound like a broken record going on and on about the same issue, we generally don’t even recognize that we’re doing it; it’s just giving voice to what we’re always going over and over and over in our own head.  (This was one of the most blessed reliefs of going on my med – being freed from that hamster wheel!)

Our brain also tends to escalate.  We get impassioned on a subject, and the more we talk or think about it, the more impassioned we get.   Combined with the impulse control problem, we may tend to speak out much more strongly than we might at a calmer moment.  We get agitated so that we cannot think rationally, or hear reason.  We go in the tank and may not even realize we’re there.   Anger is a major problem.  As a friend of mine put it, we can “go from zero to b**** in 5 seconds or less.”   Our brain is a minefield set with a hair trigger, and we do not always know what’s going to set it off.   Thinking back later, we may be just as surprised as the person who set us off.  (My meds help a lot here, too, but I still have to plead “guilty” on some counts!)

If you have BP and you’re aware enough to recognize your problems to any extent (which many or most BPs aren’t), because it’s a mental thing you may fall into the trap of thinking that somehow you “should” be able to think your way out of it, or pray your way out of it, or just try harder.  Sadly, it just doesn’t work that way.  That’s like a diabetic thinking they can will (or pray) themselves into making insulin.  If your tires are bald, it doesn’t matter if your engine is tuned and you have plenty of gas.  You still won’t have traction.    

So, what do I think would be most helpful for me – and probably others with BP?

First and foremost, remember that while our BP affects us, limits us, and to varying degrees controls us, it is not US.  We are more than our emotions, our moods, our behavior, our bipolar.  We are more than our disease, just as a person with cancer is more than their cancer.  For those of us who are believers, who we are is IN CHRIST.  Our spirits remain intact and whole in Him, no matter what our cognitive mind and outward behavior may manifest.  He holds us securely when we cannot hold onto Him.

Also of great importance:  Validate our condition for what it is – a physiologically caused mental disease -not a lack of willpower, a failure of character, or a weakness of faith.  As I’ve described already, it’s easy to feel as if we “should” be able to do better if we could just figure out how to try hard enough.  It’s easy to feel like a moral failure, or like a “bad” Christian.  If you hear us say anything like that, speak Truth against the lie.  Speak words of worth and grace to us.  If we’re down, encourage us with God’s faithfulness and gently remind us that we are wearing “Eeyore glasses” that won’t stay on forever.   Don’t be surprised or hurt if we reject it or argue about it, as we probably will.  If we’re on a high, don’t see it as a sign that we are “better” or that we are “making progress”, but instead caution us not to trust it, encourage us with God’s faithfulness, and gently remind us that our “rose-colored glasses” will crack sooner or later.  And don’t be surprised or hurt if we reject it or argue about it, as we probably will.  Always remember that our spirit is still listening, no matter how our cognitive mind and emotions may react!  I can’t tell you how many times certain of my friends listened to my repetitions of my woes during my son’s Hell years, and responded consistently with gentle, positive encouragement that, at the time, I rejected – yet it made a huge difference once I was able to calm down later.

Don’t patronize us or dismiss us when we’re upset about something.  Just because we’re BP doesn’t mean there might not be a very valid reason for us to be upset.  Non-BP people get upset, too.  The fact that our response may be over the top doesn’t automatically negate the validity of the reason we’re upset in the first place.  Even if you don’t think the reason is valid, even if it comes because our BP brain is seeing something askew, acknowledge the reality that we are upset. 

Don’t demean our BP by casually flinging the term about at people who are just moody, or get angry easily, or don’t deal well with stress. 

Don’t take personally the accusations a BP brain may come up with.  Since the BP brain is looking through a warped lens, it cannot judge rationally.  Accept that the accusation is our brain’s reality at the moment, and try not to react with your own anger or with defensiveness. The real us does know better, even if our cognitive mind doesn’t.  Try to respond emotionally to the real us while dealing rationally with the BP us.

Does being a BP mean we should get a free pass on behaving abominably?  “She’s BP, so you just have to excuse her smashing up your car with a baseball bat.”  Um, no.  When we’re in the tank we need you to understand, yes, but that doesn’t mean you have to just stand by and let us do damage.  If things are just too intense, and you need to protect yourself, then say, “I think my being here isn’t helping, so I’m going to leave now.  We can talk more later.”  We each have our limits of how much toxicity we can take; it is nothing to feel bad about if you simply can’t handle someone’s BP episodes.

You can help empower us by helping us figure out what we can and can’t exercise control over.  It’s easy to feel totally helpless, but there may, in fact, be some factors we CAN do something about, or some triggers we COULD avoid.  Just as there may be certain signs that a diabetic is getting low on blood sugar, there are sometimes certain “tells” that indicate something is brewing with a BP.  Just as certain flashing lights may trigger an epileptic seizure, there may be situations that tend to trigger BP episodes.  We just generally can’t recognize them ourselves, though, so it may be helpful if you point them out.  I know one of my “tells”, and often cues me in to the fact that I’m feeling stressed long before I would become cognitively aware that “Oh, this is very stressful.”

One thing I’ve struggled with is that I usually can’t tell when I’m getting too worked up talking about a subject I’m upset about.  If someone just listens and says nothing, it actually tends to escalate me as I try to get a response.  Now that I’m on meds It helps for someone to ask, “Are you sure it’s worth getting this upset about?” or “OK, you’ve explained the problem.  What do you think you could do about it?”        

One of the biggest problems for most BP patients is that they won’t stay on their meds.  I am in the small minority who are self-aware enough to recognize that it is only my meds that enable me to function as I do now.  Most BP patients, once they get feeling better, decide that they no longer need their meds and stop taking them, with predictable results.   If you know someone with BP and are in a position of enough trust, don’t let meds be a taboo subject.  Meds are like an artificial leg for an amputee – you can walk as long as you’re wearing it, but it doesn’t make your leg grow back.  Our meds don’t “fix” our broken brain, they simply enable it to function more like a healthy brain.  There is no cure for BP. 

My greatest fear now is that of my medication losing its effectiveness.  That is unfortunately the way of psychotropic drugs; the brain gets used to them eventually.  I may be able to stay on this drug, and even at this dose, for years.  I may need to up the dose; I am at a mid-level dose now, so there are two more steps up I could increase to.  Once that threshold is crossed, however, which will happen sooner or later, I will be back to playing medication roulette.  There is no way of predicting how any person will respond to any particular medication.  There is no one medication that is the preferred “first line of defense”.   It truly is trial-and-error, and those errors can be pretty terrifying.  The second drug I tried shattered me to pieces; if not for God’s grace, some of which came in the shape of a couple of dear friends, I’m not sure I’d have made it through the experiment.  If I have to play the game again, I know God will be with me – but I will freely confess that I am still afraid of going to that dark place again. 

When I received the diagnosis of BP2, it was world changing, like shifting a kaleidoscope and getting an entirely new picture.  I can’t describe what a relief it was to have a name and explanation put to that monster in me.  I wasn’t a terrible person, a bad, angry mother – I was a person with a broken brain. I wasn’t guilty so much as I was a victim.  I hadn’t been deliberately slamming my car into others; I was hydroplaning.   I know – ok, I suspect – that I have lost some friends over the years because of my BP.  (Or maybe they just didn’t like puns.)   Especially in the last 10 years before the diagnosis, I was very, um, intense, shall we say, and it’s not really surprising that some people pulled away.  What amazes me, what I am so very, very thankful for, are the friends who stuck with me in spite of it all, who never saw me the way I saw myself.  They have truly been ministers of God’s grace in my life – and BP or no BP, I hope that I may also extend that same grace to others.

So, there you have it, if you’ve actually read through this whole ridiculously long post!   If this helps even one person to understand the world of BP better, elicits compassion from just one person for the BP in his life, helps one BP to feel like she’s not alone, then it’s been worth writing.  God’s grace to you all, and to God be the glory.


To most people, a solution is the answer to a problem. To a chemist, a solution is something that's all mixed up. Good thing God's a chemist, because I'm definitely a solution!

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