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Originally Posted by worrywort76
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I am freaking out. Due to some recent talks with my husband and reading on bipolar behaviors, I believe I suffer from Bipolar Disorder. I have so much of the signs/ symptoms I keep reading about. I see my primary care physician in August and I plan to ask him to recommend a Psychiatrist/Mental Health professional that can test me somehow and let me know if I do have it or not. But I am definitely freaking out. I feel like crying and get a knot in my throat every time I think about it. I am obsessing really. My head is just running with so many thoughts and I am worried cause I have 3 kids. It worries me that I might pass this on to them and I definitely can't talk about this with family or my husbands' for that matter. Even if I do get diagnosed with it. They are way too judgemental(my husbands' fam.) My family will think its nonsense for me to think I have a mental disorder. But the more I think about what they call episodes, the more I recognize them happening through my life since I was teen maybe. I think I started with the depression and then probably had my first manic episode when I was 17/18/19. Since my mid 20's I thought something was wrong with me, but all I could really plainly see was my depression. Until now or maybe unconsiously a few months ago I realized about my manic episodes. That is the main reason why I felt as if I was a totally different person during my manic episodes. Is that normal? To feel as if you might even be a total different person?
I plan to go to the library and borrow some books on bipolar disorder. I want to know as much about it as I can. Get myself ready before I see a mental health professional. I don't want to be bipolar. I saddens me and worries me. I am also going to look into mental health problems in my family. Any advise anyone?
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After noticing my depression for a few years and then noticing what may be manic or hypomanic episodes, I decided to do some research on bipolar disorder and it seemed to explain everything. I did the whole freaking out and reading as much as possible about it thing too. Because of my age I would have to talk to my parents before being able to see a psychiatrist, which I haven't done. Now I just stop trying to label it and just try to deal with it. You say you don't want to be bipolar, but think of it this way. If you are, nothings actually different except it has a name now and it can be more easily treated if you and the doctors know what's wrong.