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Old Mar 29, 2014, 06:44 AM
Anonymous37909
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Steve223 View Post
This isn't directly in the bipolar category, but I think that people on this forum seem quite sharp about mental illness in general so this seems like the best place to post this. I am concerned about my declining functioning and mental health problems. I started off as a kid full of hope and promise, someone who was very studious yet very socially skilled. I had it all you could say. Then, in my adolescence the madness crept in and I did not even realize it. I began to hang with the wrong crowd, drink excessively, and act like a complete idiot. All the while, I had many bizarre ideas about the world and myself, some of which I believed with complete or near complete certainty. As time went on, my performance in school went downhill and although I had a mild case of ADHD all along, it began to seriously negatively impact on my life. In college, I began to hang with the wrong crowd and use hard drugs. Now, after I have gotten away from drugs and am attempting to return to being a studious and bright young adult, everything is falling apart in front of me and I sometimes feel powerless to stop my bizarre and often grandiose ideas. Today I thought somebody in my program at school was sent by a former friend to sabotage me. I feared that he had worldwide connections and would screw me over no matter where I went or what I did. I felt he was tracking me and that there was no escape. I have had ideas like this before for brief periods like I did today over the years and clung to them more so than today, but I have to say that today's insanity has made me wonder about my mental health a bit. I feel that I really want to get things together, but that's hard when you are essentially in a different mental place than 99% of the world.
In a research study, mood disorders developed in over 25% of people who began abusing substances in adolescence and young adulthood (this was cited in the BPHope magazine). Similarly, other mental conditions such as psychosis and schizophrenia can be triggered by drug abuse. Unfortunately these effects remain even after you stop using substances. The fact that you have ADHD would have made you more vulnerable.

Quote:
Most people with mental illnesses aren't "crazy", just have a problem psychologically. However, I fear that I may just be plain bonkers
You're not "bonkers" - you too have a psychological, and possibly physiological, problem.

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As others have suggested, you ought to discuss your experiences with your psychologist and psychiatrist. Since they have your detailed mental history, they'll be able to suggest more accurately what's going on.