View Single Post
 
Old May 09, 2022, 08:57 AM
Soupe du jour Soupe du jour is offline
Elder
 
Member Since: Jun 2015
Location: Czechia
Posts: 5,172
rdgrad15, I think you're definitely right about many people. Stigma, self-denial, and other factors definitely shape attitudes, and though it is certainly often a learned behavior, general education and intelligence doesn't always make a difference.

I think a lot of people also know that they may be mentally ill, but flat out want to fight it. What I call "tight fisting it" through life. I did plenty of that in the past, and on occasion find myself still. Several people (and I did in the past) will quit meds, not necessarily denying the mental illness but again thinking they can manage without. Ditto goes when it comes to therapy. Surely bad medication side effects can inspire this, but also other factors. Feeling "weak" is against many people's grains.

Another take on this is being so frustrated with being ill that we convince ourselves we are better than we are. I've been guilty of that, too. I've done mood charts where I kept indicating "baseline, baseline, baseline" when later I redid them to show either mildly/moderately depressed or even hypomanic or manic. An unexpected hospitalization (or near one) or ramification to behavior can be enlightening. I sometimes suspect the exact opposite of some others.
__________________
Dx: Bipolar type 1

Psych Medications:
* Tegretol XR (carbamazepine ER) 800 mg
* Lamictal (lamotrigine) 150 mg
* Seroquel XR (quetiapine ER) 500 mg

I also take meds for blood pressure, cholesterol, and tachycardia.
Hugs from:
Breaking Dawn, downandlonely, MuseumGhost, unaluna
Thanks for this!
MuseumGhost, rdgrad15, unaluna