A Bipolar Overview: Discovering Bipolar
Many illnesses abound the world today. Before, people live longer and with only a handful of illnesses. But today's times are very much
different because of the many changes that take place.
New technology has brought new things into this world. Many inventions, new foods, and all the new stuff that people now enjoy seem to
contribute to the many illnesses suffered by millions of people; not to mention the different day to day experiences that people encounter as
they go through life.
The typical life of an individual begins as he wakes up in the morning. He then goes through his life everyday doing his routine activities.
He goes to work, meet deadlines, attend meetings, and deals with different kinds of people.
At home, he has to do chores, and spend time with the family. He also does other activities like going to the supermarket, church, and other
important places. And not only that, he encounters different situations everyday that either he welcomes or resents. Many factors contribute to
making an individual ill.

Individuals suffering from bipolar disorder have to deal with such condition all the days of their life. Talking about such disorder can be
very embarrassing for some people but this should not be so since the illness can be managed especially if you know how to do it.
Before, the condition was popularly called manic depression. But now, it is called bipolar because of the two extreme poles that make up the
condition. A good example is the globe having a north and a south pole. When an individual experiences different symptoms associated with one
pole, then he's having an episode.
Episode
The episodes are divided into four types: depression, mania, hypomania, and mixed mood. When a person feels depressed, he or she feels sad and
don't want to do the usual things. Those that exhibit mania usually start having a high feeling, and become angry and irritable. They are the
ones who tend to do risky things.
The milder form is known as hypomania which can lead to either depression or mania; this episode also starts with feeling good and the person
may think that more things are done. Others who have episodes with feelings of depression and mania mixed together is called mixed mood.
Symptoms
Symptoms are divided into depression and mania. Depression symptoms include feelings of sadness, hopelessness, worthlessness, and guilt. These
individuals sleep too much or too little and experience changes in appetite or weight. They always feel tired, restless, and can't make a sound
decision. The worst case is when the person thinks about suicide and death. Mania symptoms include an increase in the level of energy, racing
thoughts, sleeps less, easily distracted, more self-confident, more talkative, focused but accomplishes little, and often do extreme or unusual
activities.
Types
The four main types of bipolar are the following:
1. Bipolar I – this type involves manic and mixed episodes, as well as major episodes of depression. The bipolar patient may experience more
than one episode for several days, weeks, or even months. Seasonal changes also seem to affect the symptoms exhibited by the person.
2.
|
Bipolar II – this involves major episodes of depression and a hypomania episode. Normal functioning can also take
place in between the said episodes.
|
3.
|
Cyclothymic Disorder – this is a fluctuating disturbance in mood with hypomania and depression episodes. This is
considered the milder form since episodes do not occur regularly and happens for shorter and less severe times.
|
| 4. |
Not Specified – this is a treatable disorder and the symptoms exhibited by the individual does not fall into any
of the three types mentioned; the disorder varies from one person to another. |
There is no known cause of bipolar disorder. Some say that it has something to do with genetics. But that alone is not enough to cause such
disorder. Perhaps other factors contribute to the disorder and that is why further studies are underway.
People from different races, ethnic groups, children, teenagers, or young/older adults can suffer from bipolar disorder. The brain cells of
each individual don't work normally if there is an imbalance in the neurotransmitters. These are special chemicals that seem to be involved in
the disorder.
If you think you're experiencing bipolar symptoms, then you'd better check with your doctor as soon as possible.
Describing a Bipolar Disorder: Learning Its Episodes and Symptoms
Emotions have its ups and downs. It is normal for everyone to feel. But for a person affected by a bipolar disorder, these highs and lows can
become very extreme and hinder daily activities. There are times that the situation also became dangerous. A person cannot work because of
feeling so depressed. Then the next day, this person feels great, filled with creativity and endless energy. However, some people can
misinterpret such actions as being reckless and uncontrollable.
A bipolar disorder can be unpredictable and confusing. This medical condition is also chronic. Never feel embarrassed if you are affected with
this type of disorder. Learning all about it is helpful to manage such medical illness successfully.
A bipolar disorder affects the ability of a person to feel various moods in a normal range. Manic depression is another term for bipolar
disorder. Bipolar is used to describe two extremes or poles. People affected by this serious medical condition have mood alterations ranging from
an extremely low (depression) to an extremely high (mania).
The best picture to describe such condition is the globe. The globe is divided into the North and South Pole. The mania would be the North
Pole and the depression would be the South Pole. If a person experiences the symptoms of either pole for a definite duration of time, then he or
she is experiencing an episode. These episodes must be thoroughly discussed with a healthcare provider.
There are four kinds of episodes associated with bipolar disorder according to APA (American Psychiatric
Association).
1.
|
Depression. Sometimes, a person can feel extremely sad for a prolong period of time. It is very impossible for him
or her to eat or leave his or her bed. The things he or she enjoys to do seem very difficult.
|
|
2.
|
Mania. This is the other pole of a bipolar disorder. It may begin with a high or good feeling. But after sometimes
a person can feel very angry and irritable.
|
|
3.
|
Hypomania. Compared to mania, this type of episode is only mild. A person might feel very good thinking that more
things are getting done. But after a while, his or her mood changes to a full-blown depression or mania.
|
|
| 4. |
Mixed mood or mixed episode. The feelings of depression and mania can affect a person many times during the
day. |
|
These episodes can put a person at risk for committing suicide. Experiencing mania or depression for more than four episodes within a year is
known as rapid-cycling. There are different symptoms for both poles of a bipolar disorder.
The mania symptoms include increased levels of energy, reduce needs for sleep, easily distracted, mind jumps, racing thoughts, more talkative,
more confident, focus on doing things but accomplishes only little, and more risky even if it means things are going to be bad.
The depression symptoms include feeling blue or sad, feeling down, losing interests on the things which a person is enjoying including sex,
feeling guilty, feeling hopeless, feeling worthless, sleep too much or too little, changes in appetite or weight, feeling tired, feeling too
little energy, feeling restless, concentration problems, decision-making problems, and thoughts of suicide or death.
Moreover, it is also vital to learn how mood swings are triggered. Emotions and events that happened in a life of a person can be the
triggering factors. Sad, unpleasant, or happy events can make a person experiences either depressive or manic episodes. Triggers or stressors
include irregular schedule of sleep, misuse of drugs or alcohol, stopping medication, starting medications for depression or other herbal
products, and having problems related to thyroid and other health condition.
Nevertheless, different people may experience different triggers. Some people also consider seasonal changes, illness, holidays, work
problems, friends or family's disagreements, marriage, starting a recent job, starting college, love one's death as triggers. Figuring out what
triggers a person can help. Keeping a mood chart to record varying emotions can determine mood swing patterns. This can be a tough task but
provides many treatment possibilities.
A bipolar disorder is not more of a problem today. There are lots of treatments available. It is very important to talk to a healthcare
provider to create a plan that will work best in stabilizing mood swings.
Sugar and Salt: My Life with Bipolar Disorder an Overview
Sugar and Salt: My Life with Bipolar Disorder is a book about a middle aged woman who had and managed to survive bipolar disorder
also known as Manic-depression, but along the way experiences the bitter and sweet moments of life in a not so normal way. She only knew of her
illness when she turned 32.
In the book, it is vividly detailed what it is like to live in a family threatened by such an illness, how to fit in school or do
work while dealing with the undiagnosed illness.
She also describes her ordeal of facing the failure of her marriage and other relationships, how she tries to understand that,
however she tries to live a normal life it just bounce back and still she lives a very different and more complicated life than the persons she
knew. Until she admits that there is something wrong about her and that she needs professional help.
After the acceptance of the strange malady within her comes the long journey to get treatment as she tries one medication after
the other after being mistaken for a psychotic. For more or less five years her life was devoted in seeking the proper knowledge and ways to
approach the said disorder that she has been putting up for such a long time until the part came where she realizes that for her to get the
proper treatment she needs she had to enter a mental hospital.
She illustrates the life she had lived in a locked ward and how fortunate she was when her attending physician finally finds a
certain medication that her disorder responds to. She feels that she had the key to break free from her long ordeal and finally she gets the
normal feeling she always wanted.
As she makes progress in the medication her disorder responds to she reaches the point where she can now get out of the mental hospital and
live like a normal person. Jane had to face the world on her own again and start a brand new life. She was able to get the private life she
wanted and the dream job that she had been always dreaming of without her bosses and co-employees knowing her deep, dark secret. But, after ten
long years, unfortunately she develops an allergy to the one and only medication that has been of very good service to her and must start the
treatment all over again.
At some point in the process, she loses the job she had dreamt about and falls back into the deep ditches of depression. It is a very touching
story about a woman's triumph over her bipolar disorder that for the second time has threatened her and once again she survived it.
Find out how she managed to surpass it and how you too can mange the disorder through medication and therapy should you find out that you have
such illness or maybe a family member experiences such a scary disease. The author, Jane Thompson has worked as a paralegal, a teacher, as a
social worker not to mention as a writer. It's been several years now since she wrote for the publisher of a certain political encyclopedia and
has also served as one of the medical writer for a training corporation.
It was such experiences that she came to learn how to express herself with great conciseness and accuracy. When the author decided to write
her very own story which is the Sugar and Salt: My Life with Bipolar Disorder, her experience aided her in getting her work printed on paper. And
so with her experience, as a medical writer and her stock knowledge about mental health issues, those made it a bit easier for her to write the
said story. When the author just started, she had twenty short stories printed already and Sugar and Salt: My Life with Bipolar Disorder is her
first book.
Currently Jane Thompson is the author of Mosby's Clinical Nursing, a comprehensive reference in clinical nursing to be included as a reference
in the educational program materials of the Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. She is also the co-author of
Secrets Volume 15: The Best in Erotic Romance, Jane Thompson was also the editor of American Express Presents Top Chefs of the Triangle and a lot
more.
A possible treat:
Sweet chestnuts or marones, as they are also called, are one of
the best loved treats of fall in the wine-loving German country of Palatinate – roasted and toasted with new wine, they are
delicious…
For Germans:
Das Kernstück eines Laserdruckers..toner | Münzen
Das Kernstück eines jeden Laserdruckers, das Herz von einem Laserdrucker ist der Fotoleiter. Ein Fotoleiter ist die Trommeleinheit die
durch hervorragende Qualität eine lange Lebensdauer erreichen kann. Photoleiter, wie diese Bildtrommel auch noch genannt wird, ist eine der
Basiskomponenten sowohl einen von einem Laserdrucker als auch von einem Fotokopierer. Und da Faxgeräte auch oft mit derselben Technik die
empfangenen Faxe ausdrucken gilt dies auch für diese Büromaschinen.
|