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Rated: 13+ · Editorial · Experience · #1960560
Some attributes I assigned to being bipolar.

Preface:

I

My emotional baseline isn't like other peoples'. I spend a lot of time very low and depressed, or very full of life and manic. I see a psychiatrist and take my medication daily, so I am fortunate to have a great percentage of my time in the "non-irritated zone."

Some days I wake up, unable to motivate beyond the sofa. Some days I wake up irritated, agitated, or in some other emotionally wrecked state as the result of a dream. Most days, if I don't audit my own behavior, I behave as an unstable woman in the throes of a biochemically induced state much like menopause.

Try it sometime. It takes a real effort to step out of your circumstances and look at a situation outside of one's normal perspective. It's not an automatic behavior, but every day I try to learn more about this biochemical disorder that sticks to my daily life.


Although I have found no printed references on the subject, I think I experience time differently--the passage of time. This may be an individual issue, and not related to bipolar disorder at all. If you ask me when something happened in the past, I doubt I could tell you. I forget friends' birthdays, I miss appointments, and writing deadlines are murder on me. If I enjoy what I'm writing and editing, I lose all track of time. I forget to pay bills. And it always takes me longer to get someplace than I planned--making me perpetually late.

I try to change my behavior, and leave myself notes, but time is always pressing on me. Sometimes it keeps me from sleeping. Other times it presses me to sleep for hours on end. Bipolar disorder is based on the chemistry of the blood of a person, similar to the way hormonal messages are carried in the blood. In a large part bipolars don't have control of their own lives. They are at the mercy of the chemistry of their neurology systems and biochemical neurological activity.

For example, we know what happens when a human, or animal is in the throes of the adrenalin of a fight or flight situation. The brain focuses on the immediate problem. This person, or animal, is about to have to fight for their life or run. The brain tells the body, "Let loose those adrenalin chemicals because we have been called to be ready." The heart beats faster and breathing is faster. The body is pumped up in this situation because of a chemical message.

In other situations, the brain's and the body's present, or situational setting, will set off hormones. Those hormones may influence, if not override, behavior. Have you ever been around a high school in spring? With urges of mental love and/or physical sexual behavior, students do have a hard time concentrating on their studies. Can these kids "shake off" their feelings? Do they want to? Do they even understand what's happening to them? Hormones rage and pimples appear. There's no going back to the way it was. With little experience, teens too often fall into the sexual coupling, and nine months later a baby comes. Was it their "fault" they did what they did because of their hormones? Could they have controlled it if they tried? You may reach your conclusions about the strength of hormones in our male and female lives.

Psychosis, the outrageous behavior that too many bipolars are known for, happens when the person's body chemistry gets out of whack. Alcohol and street drugs aggravate the situation, though the person may feel like they are medicating what is out of kilter with them. For example, a depressed bipolar may seek cocaine to raise their spirits. But when the cocaine wears off, the person feels twice as bad--based on certain chemicals that will have been depleted by drug use.

What I share in "Kaleidoscope" is mainly based on my personal experience and research reading. In no way is it meant to diagnose or treat any mental disorder. Treatment for mental disorders is best obtained by licensed psychiatrists.

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