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  #1  
Old Nov 16, 2009, 09:01 AM
spencermm spencermm is offline
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Member Since: Nov 2009
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Hello, I am looking for online resourses, information, support, forums etc. for parents of adult children with Bipolar Disorder.
Specifically, we need help in 2 areas:
1. Would like to better know how we can help our daughter.
2. Help in knowing how to set healthy boundaries. She is an adult and not living with us(but lives close by), but her issues still become our issues. We are at our wits end and feel our own mental health is dwindling quickly.
Thank you so much for any help,
Spencermm

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  #2  
Old Nov 18, 2009, 01:19 PM
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Junerain Junerain is offline
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Member Since: Jul 2004
Location: dreamy land
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I recommend going to a support group for parents of people with bipolar disorder

click here and type in your zipcode to find one near you

http://www.dbsalliance.org/site/Page...rt_findsupport

Or if you write more about your specific problems here on this website, out of the thousands that read, someone will have been in your situation can can give practical advice...........

I feel for you, hugs to you
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  #3  
Old Nov 18, 2009, 02:25 PM
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spiritual_emergency spiritual_emergency is offline
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Member Since: Feb 2007
Location: The place where X marks the spot.
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Hello spencermm,
I think I know that boat you're in.

We also have an adult child with bipolar disorder and are strugging with finding the best means of addressing the issues that come up in a manner that respects everyone and also distributes responsibility appropriately. In our case, our child is still living at home with us. They have exerienced more than six manic episodes in less than two years but have only recently been diagnosed with bipolar disorder and thus, have only recently begun using medications that might help them find stability.

1. Would like to better know how we can help our daughter.

The "standard" advice is to educate yourself on what bipolar disorder is, what forms of treatment are available that can help the individual with the diagnosis manage it, and how to create a supportive relationship with professional caregivers. If you're like me, you probably have a working grasp of the basics and are getting into the nitty-gritty mechanics of living with the diagnosis on a daily basis. For example, a diagnostic definition might inform you that someone in a manic episode lacks impulse control and medications may take time to produce stability but how are you to deal with the fall-out of the episode? Who is responsible for what? Who cleans up the mess? Are your own standards and expectations too high or not high enough?

2. Help in knowing how to set healthy boundaries. She is an adult and not living with us(but lives close by), but her issues still become our issues. We are at our wits end and feel our own mental health is dwindling quickly.

What we're finding is that personal boundaries become blurred. There may be periods of time when a caregiver needs to assume control but resentments can build on both sides; the individual with the diagnosis resents that they have lost control or that others are imposing as much (they may also feel guilt and recrimination at not being able to retain control over their own lives) and the support people around them find themselves feeling overwhelmed at trying to manage not only their own life, but someone else's. The non-technical term for this is a cluster-*****. ha ha. The essential problem is that everyone has lost their sense of personal boundaries, and hence, their sense of personal responsibility.

I recently posed a question to the group here asking for some insights in regard to manic behavior and impulse control. That might be one place for you to start as there was some good feedback from others and I also found a number of helpful articles that I linked in that thread: Mania and Impulse Control. I would especially recommend the article titled The Responsibility Pie but all of them were quite good.

Something else we've begun looking at is our communication patterns, particularly when it comes to conflict resolution. My own style is to wade into the mess as a means of looking for swift resolution but I often feel alone in that space. My husband's pattern is to withdraw as a means of dealing with his own feelings of betrayal, anger, despair and out of a desire to not inflame the situation by bringing those personal responses into it. Our child's pattern is to retreat into a shell of defensiveness and to run away if they feel overwhelmed. As you might imagine, nothing was resolved as long as one person was running away, another one was retreating to the periphery and one was floundering in the middle feeling as if they were the only one who was willing to take on responsibility. We're not communicating well and this is contributing to building resentment and tension in the household.

In light of the recent crisis, we decided we're going to commit to a weekly meeting so we can discuss issues that have come up and work toward their ongoing resolution. It also means that we'll (hopefully) all be better informed of what is happening. For example, I sometimes forget to mention some key detail to my husband and he'll occasionally have conversations with our child wherein they'll make an agreement I'm not aware of.

This morning I'm searching the net for good articles on conflict resolution because it seems to me that we need to become aware of how we're dealing with conflict and refine our attempts to resolve it. There may be better articles out there but here's one that seems to lay down a basic structure:The Top 10 Tips on Managing Conflict, Emotional Tension and Anger

Meantime, something I've long encouraged others to do is to build a support team for themselves. I define support teams as people we identify as helpful: Family and Friends (pets too, if you consider them to be part of the family); Professionals; Peers, and; Mentors. Our own child doesn't yet have their entire team fleshed out -- in particular, they're lacking peers and mentors. But so am I. That's something I need to address for myself.

~ Namaste

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~ Kindness is cheap. It's unkindness that always demands the highest price.
  #4  
Old Nov 18, 2009, 05:20 PM
lfulgham lfulgham is offline
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Member Since: Nov 2009
Location: Indiana
Posts: 3
Quote:
Originally Posted by spencermm View Post
Hello, I am looking for online resourses, information, support, forums etc. for parents of adult children with Bipolar Disorder.
Specifically, we need help in 2 areas:
1. Would like to better know how we can help our daughter.
2. Help in knowing how to set healthy boundaries. She is an adult and not living with us(but lives close by), but her issues still become our issues. We are at our wits end and feel our own mental health is dwindling quickly.
Thank you so much for any help,
Spencermm

My daughter is diagnosed with ADHD and Fibromyalgia, but I fear it is BiPolar! She has 3 children and is trying to go to school. Has a great BF but I fear he is loosing patience with her.
  #5  
Old Nov 18, 2009, 06:48 PM
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VickiesPath VickiesPath is offline
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Member Since: Jul 2009
Location: Phoenix, AZ, USA
Posts: 2,779
I am a member of the National Alliance on Mental Illness or NAMI. I am training to become a speaker for their program called "In Our Own Voice". IOOV is where individuals who have lived with mental illness go out into the public and speak about what it's like to live with mental illness in the real world.

I have lived with bipolar illness since I was a child but was not diagnosed correctly until 2004 at the age of 52. For 20 years before that, I was misdiagnosed with major depression, which is not unusual for people like me. My treatment was very inadequate and it was not until I received the correct diagnosis that I truly started living a meaningful life.

NAMI is primarily an advocacy organization for the families of individuals with serious mental illnesses and have chapters all across the country. Here is their website:

www.nami.org

Perhaps you might find something there that may be of assistance to you in your quest to educate yourselves in order to help both you and your daughter.
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Help with Bipolar adult child pleaseVickie
  #6  
Old Nov 18, 2009, 06:55 PM
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Zen888 Zen888 is offline
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http://www.bphope.com/ Bipolar Disorder magazine
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