Personal Stories

Living with Bipolar Disorder

I was first diagnosed with bipolar disorder when I was 14. I was in my freshman year in high school and wound up feeling very depressed. I had no idea what was going on. My doctor was no help and asked all the wrong questions. I was not pregnant or taking drugs. Every day was a struggle to get out of bed and go to school. I didn’t feel like doing anything anymore and lost interest in everything I loved to do. I eventually found a psychiatrist who diagnosed me with bipolar disorder.

The meds worked for a while. I came around and got back to doing well at school but when it came around to my senior year I had a different feeling. I was manic and felt very high and free. I had fast speech and thought I could do anything. I ran away from home one night and thankfully did something so the police found me and brought me home. I had boundless energy and could stay awake many days and nights. I had to be put on different meds. I graduated from high school barely and made it into community college where I thrived and made the honor roll then I transferred to a state university where I also made the honor roll and had a job at a day care.

After five years of college I was almost set to get my bachelors in education and an art degree. I had been dating someone from another country and was not really feeling like myself again. I was having another manic episode. A few weeks later my finals were over I found out I was pregnant. I called my psychiatrist and was put on medication which I call the zombie drug. It made me tired all the time.

My family was scared and I was scared for myself and my baby. I was in and out of psych wards when I was pregnant. Thank goodness, I had a healthy baby. I got married and went through an awful divorce with my baby’s father. I went through another bad stay at a psych hospital and was very manic. With the support of my mom and going into therapy and back to my psychiatrist I was able to get stable again in time to appear at my court hearing.

There were several other manic episodes throughout my life. I am 38 now and every day is a struggle. I get psychotic manic episodes it seems about every six years now. Every year it happens, it slows down my life and is hard to pull myself back up.

I am thankful for my 16-year-old son, my family, my friends, my therapist and my same psychiatrist I have had since I was 14. I am thankful that they have stayed with me and provided me with the guidance, love and support that I needed to get back on my feet many times. I am not scared of fighting back against my mental health condition. It made me the strong person that I am today. Living with bipolar disorder doesn’t make me a bad person. It makes me a more educated and knowledgeable person. I have more empathy also to those with a mental illness. It’s a rough life and the struggle is real. I will just live everyday grateful for the support I have and grateful that I am still alive.

 


You Are Not Alone graphicShare your story, message, poem, quote, photo or video of hope, struggle or recovery. By sharing your experience, you can let others know that they are not alone.