Article

The Importance of Treating Bipolar Disorder Properly

Topic: Bipolar DisorderBy Michelle C. LanePublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 2,324 legacy views

Legacy rating: 5/5 from 2 archived votes

Bipolar Disorder is difficult to treat. People that have been diagnosed with this disorder, do not want to take the medication once they have been regulated with the proper dosage. The reason this happens, is once their body has been treated with the medication properly, they begin to feel as though nothing is wrong and they do not need the medication. This is a symptomatic result from Bipolar due to being regulated on the medication, because it is working! They feel so good, that they feel as though they do not need the medication any longer.

Once they stop taking the meds, their moods begin to spiral out of control as the medication leaves the system. This can lead to severe depression, thoughts or acts of suicide, and it will begin to affect every area of their life. Relationships will suffer, work, education, everything.

Bipolar is a mood disorder that mimics the symptoms of depression or ADHD, just to name two. I can not stress enough how important it is to treat Bipolar or any other mood disorder with the proper medications and pay attention to your friend or loved one that has been diagnosed with Bipolar. If someone you know shows erratic mood swings, feelings of euphoria straight into depression or vice verse, or any other changes in mood that just do not seem right, I urge you to bring this to the attention of a professional!

Bipolar is not a life threatening illness, unless it goes untreated. If untreated for long periods of time, suicide is a very real concern.

For more information on Bipolar Disorder, or other mood disorders, https://health.google.com/health/ref/Bipolar+disorder

Bipolar is not a curable disease. However, it is treatable, and those that receive proper treatment are able to function and go on to lead productive lives!

My wish is to bring more attention to the disorder so that others may receive the help and diagnosis they need, sooner. It is traumatic enough to be diagnosed, it is yet even more traumatic to feel all alone. You are not alone.

Article author

About the Author

Michelle C. Lane is a freelance writer and parent of a child, diagnosed at the age of fifteen, with Bipolar Disorder. She is the author of "Bipolar: One Mother's Journey"- due to be released in early 2011.

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

You hear it all the time, a person is given a diagnosis of bipolar disorder, the doctor writes a prescription, tells them to book a follow up appointment and that person leaves the doctors office with a lot of unanswered questions. Often their first reaction is denial, confusion, frustration and for some possibly relief that they’re not crazy. Bipolar is an illness were those diagnosed and the people caring for them will both need understanding and emotional support. The best place to fulfill these needs is through education.

Related piece

Website

Marcy Rubin is a Professional Life Coach working with the Bipolar Community. Her site offers information on the benefits life coaching for Bipolar, A Directory with 500 links & resources, a list of 100 famous people with bipolar, along with testimonials from clients, mentors & peers on Marcy and her accomplishments.

Related piece

Website

Life Coach Marcy Rubin is a respected professional in the bipolar community. Her coaching style is geared to specifically target the struggles people with Bipolar Disorder encounter. She encourages you to work with a life coach who first hand understand what it's like to live with Bipolar Disorder

Related piece

Article

Most of us approach the holiday season hoping, wishing and pretending that everything will be OK, but what we often fail to do is PLAN & PREPARE. By taking time to revisit past holidays you gather a lot of useful information to help with preparing and planning for the next holiday season.

Related piece