What are your thoughts about it?
That it can be reasonably controlled with lithium-based medications. I know a few people who bipolar, and the biggest problem they have is that they want to go off their medication quite frequently. But once they go back, they do quite well.
Do you think that medication is the best option?
Could someone who is bipolar possibly benefit from routines?
(I wanna add more but I am drawing a blank at the moment)
Well I ask that, because mast hate the meds, and do not think monthly labs are really worth it... I do a lot of research on bipolar, and have since I was about 16 (I oddly can talk about it and remember things better then I can type it all out)...
and I question a lot of.. Well.. Everything, that people say about the disorder..
Like people, the symptoms of bipolar differ greatly sometimes person to person.. I find it facinating that one combo can work well on on, and not on another.. On a note like that (while I am thinking about it)...
When a persons body becomes adaptive to the medicine, and someone says that there isn't much more you can do...... What do you do?
What does a person do if you add personality disorders on top of a bi polar dx?
They've tried different things for decades and medication appears to be the only thing that will work. Since it's caused by chemical imbalances in the brain that would seem logical indeed as the only effective treatment.
There is no empirical evidence for chemical imbalances. You have fallen for pharmaceutical propaganda.
According to critics, the chemical imbalance hypothesis has been overpromoted and continues to be advanced as factual by pharmaceutical companies. They believe the general population and many journalists have accepted this hypothesis into their understanding of mental illness uncritically. They have pointed to the lack of an established chemical balance (without which, they claim, the notion of an "imbalance" is meaningless). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_imbalance#Criticisms
As outlined above, there is zero empirical evidence which suggests that a chemical imbalance (like the one which pharmaceutical industries have propagated over the last 30+ years) truly exists. Aside from there being no evidence to support this theory, there also exists evidence which directly contradicts this theory. This evidence comes from neuroimaging technology and the study of the Behavior of neurons, which is captured by current technology whilst monitoring the behaviors neurologically as they occur within the sufferer. -https://www.ptsdforum.org/c/wiki/chemical-imbalance/#conclusion
Do you think that medication is the best option?
Could someone who is bipolar possibly benefit from routines?
(I wanna add more but I am drawing a blank at the moment)
Hey, that's *great* info - thanks!!!
But it leaves me wondering... why is it that my friends seem to respond to it so well AND "fall off the wagon" when they decide to stop taking it? And furthurmore, start doing so well once again when they start taking it it again. I must say that's *highly* confusing to say the least.
Like much medication (pain relievers, etc.), psychiatric medication only works to mask the symptoms, without addressing the actual cause. Most seem to hate the meds for good reason, as they report feeling "out of it", etc., which can exacerbate their depression symptoms, requiring further meds. If you have researched these meds then you know what a vicious regimen of side-effect countering they can easily become.
I will say amen to that one! I stopped taking so many meds because I felt like a shell of a person... the side effects are quite scarey