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Old Aug 10, 2017, 10:37 AM
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bukowski06 bukowski06 is offline
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Member Since: May 2017
Location: earth
Posts: 101
Thank your for your insight. This is all relatively new to me but I am trying to learn all I can so I appreciate your comment. I'm happy and also hopeful to hear that you and others have been able to find stability.

I believe I read in a different post that you are an engineer? If you don't mind me asking, did you ever have to leave the field because issues related to your dx? My husband was a laboratory researcher and he says that he would not go back, at least not now.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bioChE View Post
Not a dumb question. It's very common for people to have an episode, get stable on meds, and quit taking them. Hence I would say yes, it is more likely you'll stop taking the meds. There's a reason people use the moniker, "They're bipolar and off their meds." I hate that phrase, but have to admit it contains truth and describes a real condition.

That doesn't mean you have to stop taking meds. I've been on meds for 20 years and have never stopped taking them. In this time I've had long periods of stability and I've had some rocky times. But I hang onto the meds using the memory of some specific episodes - like the one where I was so depressed I was in bed 20-22 hours a day for three weeks straight, during a med washout/change. For some reason that one is particularly fresh in my mind, perhaps because it was relatively recent, in 2015.

Thank goodness for Latuda and Lamictal.
Thanks for this!
Guiness187055