Have Hope

I am reposting this due to some technical difficulties with the original post.

This, my first video blog post, is for people who have been newly diagnosed  with bipolar disorder. Just know that there is hope. And if I can do it so can you. And yes, meditation, yoga, relaxation, all that is great for you but it can not take the place of medication, specifically a mood stabilizer.i mean if you had kidney disease, would you think yoga, meditation, and relaxation would make you all better? No, you would not, you would take medication for it. Well bipolar disorder is a disease and you need to take medication for that as well. So remember, mood stabilizers and Hope are what you need.

Calling All Tech Savvy Bloggers, please help!

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I’ve posted three video blog posts and ALL the buttons have disappeared! There is no LIKE button, no SHARE button, no sharing on Facebook, Twitter, Google+ button, no buttons at all! Is it because I posted a video? And how do I get them back??? Please help!

I wonder if it would work if I first posted my video to Youtube and then posted it in a blog post? These videos were made by me with my iPhone, and they are of me talking about mental health issues.

If any of you brilliant bloggers know what the heck is going on and how to fix it, please tell me.

I googled the problem of having no buttons, but didn’t get anywhere. Also, you can’t contact WordPress in any way 😦 They only have a question forum. Please help and thank you!

Antidepressant Bloopers aka My Son the Antidepressant! Hahaha

Got frustrated at the end, but my son is hilarious and cute!

My First Video Blog Post: There is Hope. 

This, my first video blog post, is for people who have been newly diagnosed  with bipolar disorder. Just know that there is hope. And if I can do it so can you. And yes, meditation, yoga, relaxation, all that is great for you but it can not take the place of medication, specifically a mood stabilizer.i mean if you had kidney disease, would you think yoga, meditation, and relaxation would make you all better? No, you would not, you would take medication for it. Well bipolar disorder is a disease and you need to take medication for that as well. So remember, mood stabilizers and Hope are what you need. 

An invitation by Healthline!

 I have been invited by Healthline.com to Philadelphia to talk about my history of bipolar disorder and also to talk about which medications work well for me. Drug reps from Seroquel will be there, and if there is a poster child for Seroquel effectiveness, it is me! I’ll be there on October 21-22. I am so excited to be doing this. I had no idea what opportunities and chances would be afforded by my starting this blog, now that I know I am thrilled that I started it! I hope my story and my experience with Seroquel will be of use to the drug company, and it will help them design even more effective medications with fewer side effects. Especially without the poochy stomach side effect, haha. Well, wish me luck! And now I have to go read everything I find about the biochemistry of Seroquel, and also write down a short version of my long and always wondrous life!

The Wispy Wind

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Ah the wisps and the winds

Buffeted here and there

Anchor me, anchor me, I don’t want to wash ashore

What is control?

One day brings sunshine, another rain, can’t you flourish in both, perish in both?

No one can control the weather, who decides your fate? You? Or the wispy wind?

Then there was the time when…

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I was feeling really bad recently, it was all about my son being so far away from us. How we sold our home and moved. My mind kept telling me that parents aren’t supposed to do that, parents are supposed to stay put, kids are the one who are supposed to move away, and then when they want, come back home for a visit. I guess that is generally how it works. But when we decided that my husband would accept the job offer in Louisville, my son had been accepted at Albany Law School. We, at that time had thought that he would be going to Law School in Albany, so no one would have stayed behind in Buffalo. But as things turned out, SUNY at Buffalo Law school called him in Albany and told him he’d been taken off the waiting list, so he resigned from Albany Law and I went and got him from Albany. We scrambled to find him an apartment because there was a housing shortage in Buffalo and we were moving to Louisville in November. And then I got very sick, out of touch with reality mania 😦 So those were the circumstances that led to us leaving my son in Buffalo, which had been our home for 20 years. I had actually mostly lived in Buffalo since I was 11. It was where my son grew up, in our beautiful home in East Amherst.

Recently, thoughts of our home, thoughts of leaving my son behind, even thoughts of how my son is not here to east the dinners I cook, all those thoughts had me sobbing, feeling guilty, thinking about all the mistakes I’d made with my son and how I’d never be able to correct them. Basically, I was miserable, living in the past, heartbroken and acutely re-experiencing empty nest syndrome. Every morning I got up sobbing, feeling like my heart was breaking (that’s what empty nest syndrome feels like, a broken heart that your precious child has flown the coop), just negative, depressing thoughts. I wrote to my e-counselor and even she got really worried about the tenor of my email. She told me to call my doctor. I forwarded him the email and asked him for help. At this point, I was beginning to see that this is not just negative thoughts, this is a depression. After my doctor read my melodramatic email, he said the best thing to do is to keep talking to my counselor, this was not a psychiatric issue, it was a psychological issue. I was dumbfounded. I told him that I was so disappointed with his answer, that it basically meant he was not going to help me. After a few emails back and forth, after I insisted I was going into a depression, and these thoughts of abandoning my son, empty nest (again) and all the negative thoughts were actually attaching themselves to my depressed mood, he agreed to help me with my medication and gave me a few options of what to do and I chose increasing my Seroquel from 50 mg to 100 mg. And now, since I did that, I feel so much better. Yes those thoughts are still there, but now they are not destroying me, they are not breaking my heart, the intensity of the sadness and suffering has decreased.

Just a couple of points why mental illness is so difficult to deal with:

1) Imagine having to convince a doctor that you really had broken your leg, and you were crying from pain, not some nebulous psychological issue.

2) Imagine going to a cardiologist, who misdiagnoses you with coronary artery disease, and you look at your own symptoms and tell him the correct diagnosis is a tumor of the adrenal glands leading to over production of epinephrine (haha) leading to tachycardia, and you are right!

I realize that symptoms and descriptions of symptoms, and people’s opinions can be different, and that is exactly why mental illness is not only a bear to live with, it is also a bear to have treated.