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Old Feb 13, 2016, 06:59 PM
Anonymous37893
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NoIdeaWhatToDo View Post
Yes, I was saying both my dad and my aunt had/have BP. I think their aunt did as well, and potentially their father (my grandfather), but I don't know for sure. I was trying to convey that even though we all had/have BP, none of our symptoms really present the same way. BP doesn't look the same from one person to the next, even within the same family.

I regret mentioning it to my sibling for a couple of reasons. One, because I'm a VERY private person, and just mentioning it left me feeling extremely vulnerable. Two, because after I mentioned it, there has been absolute radio silence on the topic since - not even an acknowledgement. A by-product of having had the conversation via email, perhaps, but now I perseverate on how it was received, whether this sibling told our other sibling (they're very close), whether they associate me now with our aunt or great-aunt who are pretty unstable, whether they'll dismiss things I say/do now as just a part of the illness, etc. I come from a family that is pretty focused on success, and I know at least the sibling that I did not tell believes (or at one point believed) that mental illness is simply a matter of will, of mind over matter. Your comment about people thinking it's all in your head really struck home with me. Someone on here had a signature once that said, "I know it's all in my head...THAT'S THE PROBLEM!!!"

I think my husband might be more supportive because he has never experienced anything like depression, and he lived through a few bouts of it with me that took up over 6-7 years of our early marriage. I found a great description of it on the blog Hyperbole & A Half that did a pretty good job of describing what it's like. Once he read that, he understood the depression more.

As to the medication issue, I take some supplements that have really helped me to even out the ups and downs. They seem to cycle a little more frequently now, but they're not as low for as long (nor as high for as long). It doesn't feel stable - I still distrust how I'm going to feel an hour from now or tomorrow, but a lot of my symptoms present just in the physical sense now (anxiety, particularly), without the mental crap that typically goes along with it. It's not a perfect solution, and I still get all my symptoms, but they're better than they were, I don't need a prescription, and I'm not worried about what I'm putting into my body. I don't know if this will always work for me, but for now I'm hanging in there.
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I find it to be quite ironic to how unsupportive the people in your family seem to be considering that they have similar issues with being bipolar too. I hope that one sibling had enough respect for you to keep things private. It's to late now, but never reveal personal info like that in an email.

It's better done in person so that you can not only gauge a persons reaction, but you can also be sure that it's less likely to get repeated to anyone. With an email, there is proof of what you said. At least you can always dispute or deny what was told in person as a misunderstanding-

Your family sounds like a very difficult one. Thanks again for the detalied descritpion. I hope that you're doing better now.