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yoginiforhelp
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Default Aug 08, 2009 at 12:48 PM
  #61
ohmygosh yes marya hornbacher's madness is sensational. my therapist actually first lent it to me to read.

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hobbsy09
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Default Sep 11, 2009 at 10:02 AM
  #62
what i what to no is after geting treatment for bipolar with meds and self help things to do to help with your bipolar after all that how long do people keep there moods under control for years months days whatever bipolar you are bipolar 1 bipolar 2 what ever one i really dont mind i just would love to no your storys thats all thanks for your time

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amyjoamos
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Default Oct 28, 2009 at 03:06 PM
  #63
...one title...The Bell Jar. I was 16 when I first read it and I threw that amazing book away because it scared the living **** out of me--the girl in the story was me and I knew it. That was my first outside validation that yes, something was different about me. (naturally i bought another one)
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amyjoamos
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Default Oct 28, 2009 at 03:14 PM
  #64
Read Coleridge's "Christabel" aloud to yourself...seriously. There's something manic and depressive and mind-atering, perception melting-ish about it that blows my mind
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jameskramer
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Default Nov 06, 2009 at 11:49 PM
  #65
a book i find good is, the everything to know about bipolar disorder book. i find that it answered some questions that i had. and i use it often.
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surfsedge
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Default Jan 30, 2010 at 01:22 PM
  #66
Dr. Francis Mondimore is my psychiatrist. He is an amazing man. I am so very lucky to have him as my psy-doc. His books are excellent!
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Default Jan 30, 2010 at 01:49 PM
  #67
Hobbsy09, it has taken quite a while to get mine under control, and I have had quite a few medication changes. It is worth persevering to do this.

Amyjo, I had the exact same experience with 'The Bell Jar'. It was extremely disturbing and 'suffocating' to me. I was not as perceptive as you, because I did not realize that it was too close to home.

To get back to the topic at hand, I bought "The Bipolar Handbook" by Wes Burgess and refer to it all the time. It is very readable and set out in a logical manner.
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Default Feb 01, 2010 at 10:00 AM
  #68
Why am I Still Depressed? by Phelps is a great book about the bipolar spectrum. It is especially good for those diagnosed with bipolar 2.
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IndigoRose
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Default Mar 21, 2010 at 01:29 AM
  #69
Kay Redfield Jamison is especially good. She really hits the mark.
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sugahorse1
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Default Apr 19, 2010 at 06:01 AM
  #70
Any biographies people have read and really enjoyed?
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blueoctober
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Default Jul 30, 2010 at 11:27 PM
  #71
Living with Someone who's Living with Bipolar Disorder, 2010 by Chelsea Lowe

I just finished reading this book and it has now gone to the top of my list for books on bipolar. It is written for spouses and family members for those diagnosed, but like many diagnosed with BP, I was first a family member of a person diagnosed before I was diagnosed myself. My mom has been diagnosed BP I since I was young child and I was diagnosed BP II when I was 31 (I'm 34 now).

This book would be great for a person diagnosed, family member or significant other. My favorite chapters were Chapter 7 "Bipolar Disorders and the Workplace" and Chapter 8 "Communication and Coping Skills". What I also liked about it is it shared personal stories of couples and family members who have been affected by a person diagnosed with bipolar.

It was published in 2010, so it's information is up to date. If you are looking for a book for yourself, a family member or significant other I would highly recommend this book.

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Favorite book on bipolar "Living with Someone who is Living with Bipolar Disorder" by Chelsea Lowe, 2010

Check out my blog The Bipolar Roller Coaster: http://blueoctober.psychcentral.net/
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Thanks for this!
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Default Jul 30, 2010 at 11:29 PM
  #72
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Originally Posted by sugahorse View Post
Any biographies people have read and really enjoyed?
"Madness: a Bipolar Life" , 2008 by Marya HORNBACHER

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Favorite book on bipolar "Living with Someone who is Living with Bipolar Disorder" by Chelsea Lowe, 2010

Check out my blog The Bipolar Roller Coaster: http://blueoctober.psychcentral.net/
New Post March 23 "New Therapist"
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cdunn42
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Red face Aug 13, 2010 at 01:27 PM
  #73
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Originally Posted by darkeyes View Post
Here is a list of some of the books I have read that have been most helpful in understanding and dealing with Bipolar Disorder:

"Moodswing" by Dr. Ronald R. Fieve
* he also has his own website

"Bipolar Disorder" by Dr. Francis Mark Mondimore
A guide for patients and family
A Johns Hopkins Press Health book

"Bipolar Child" by Dr. Demetri Papolos

"Overcoming Depression" by Dr. Demetri Papolos & Janice Papolos

"An Unquiet Mind" by Kay Redfield Jamison

"Touched With Fire" by Kay Redfiled Jamison
Manic Depressive Illness and the Artisitc Temperament

"Night Falls Fast" by Kay Redfield Jamison
Understanding Suicide

"Surviving Manic Depression" by E. Fuller Torrey, M.D
and Michael B. Knable, D.O

"Manic Depressive Illness" by Dr.'s Goodwin & Jamison
Note: this is more of a very technical book and very pricey, but was worth the money and reading.

"Hatherleigh Guide to Psycopharacology"
Note: I found this at Borders Books, but I am sure Amazon or any good book store may have it.

The last 2 books I'll mention are more about the lives, narratives, of the author's life experiences.

"The Noonday Demon" by Andrrew Solomon

"Electroboy" by Andy Behrman

There are so many more, too many to list but check in the Psychology sections at Borders, Waldens, Barnes & Nobles, and also try Amazon.com.
Hope you'll find these good for starters Bipolar Recommended Books -- Worth Reading

"darkeyes"



In giving advice seek to help, not please your friend
SOLON
I would also recommend the following:

  • Bipolar In Order by Tom Wooten
  • Depression Advantage by Tom Wooten
  • Bipolar Advantage by Tom Wooten
  • The Up and Down Life by Paul E. Jones
  • Welcome to the Jungle: Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Bipolar but Were Too Freaked Out to Ask by Hilary Smith
Awesome books and must reads!
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dj586858
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Default Aug 21, 2010 at 05:38 PM
  #74
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Originally Posted by cantstopcrying View Post
A Brilliant Madness by Patty Duke. Absolutely amazing.
I saw a report about her on the internet & was so touched I immediately bought this book & read it in 2 days. I couldn't believe how much of me I saw in her as well as the differences in our illnesses. I just had to email her and she wrote back that "we are sisters in this fight". And it is an everyday, life-long fight that can be so exhausting. That is why encouragement & support from others is so important. I will have to check out some of these other books.

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kriya6
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Default Aug 26, 2010 at 02:10 PM
  #75
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Hi folks,

I have found anything on Buddhism to be more than a little helpful. Having read loads of self help stuff (usually when I'm in my own low phase) I wanted something that I could study 'on the level' so to speak, that would be relevant whatever condition I was in.

As I am vulnerable to 'scrupulosity' as discussed on another thread, and have had a close call with Catholicism, I have chosen the least doctrinaire branch of Buddhism that I could find.

The book I return to is 'Buddhism without Beliefs' by Stephen Batchelor. The paperback is easily available on Amazon and quite cheap.

A powerful message that comes over in this view of the world is that suffering (dhukka) applies to all living creatures, not just to those of us with diagnoses of specific illness. By tying in my study of this branch of zen with a meditation group that is non denominational, I have a path which is looking hopeful.

I feel that any sort of mental illness is isolating and painfully self focussing, and this practice helps to break that pattern.

Cheers, Myzen.
I totally agree that reading about Buddhism has really helped me to gain perspective on my emotional problems. The thing I love about Buddhism the MOST is that it is not religion, it is more a way of seeing the world, it is a great way to get out of the passive "victim" trap. As far as "this being an inapporpriate place to post this" How so? Are those of us with bipolar NOT suffering? Could learning ways to change our perspective on it hurt us in some way? Learning about Buddhism helped me far more than anything I've ever learned in therapy, and the practice of ACT therapy is CENTERED on mindfulness. I think this post is completely appropriate for a thread on reading material that can provide useful insight into bipolar.
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trustinthelord
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Default Sep 06, 2010 at 02:38 PM
  #76
Thanks for the info. I am the mother of a newly diagnosed biploar daughter. I am struggling. It's hard to know how to help her.
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dustintochampagne
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Default Sep 06, 2010 at 10:39 PM
  #77
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Originally Posted by yoginiforhelp View Post
just a couple books to add to the list:
Manic
by Terri Cheney (fantastic, wonderful, amazing)
i definitely agree and highly recommend this book as well. i really and honestly got a lot out of it. i could barely put it down, and in fact decided to re-read this just yesterday.

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joedeneuve81
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Smile Nov 25, 2010 at 07:48 PM
  #78
I would like to add Andrew Gadtke's "Regular & Decaf," a series of conversations between two young friends suffering from schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. Very entertaining and generally informative. Purchase at Risenman publishing, contact Dave Gadtke. Thanks!

Quote:
Originally Posted by darkeyes View Post
Here is a list of some of the books I have read that have been most helpful in understanding and dealing with Bipolar Disorder:

"Moodswing" by Dr. Ronald R. Fieve
* he also has his own website

"Bipolar Disorder" by Dr. Francis Mark Mondimore
A guide for patients and family
A Johns Hopkins Press Health book

"Bipolar Child" by Dr. Demetri Papolos

"Overcoming Depression" by Dr. Demetri Papolos & Janice Papolos

"An Unquiet Mind" by Kay Redfield Jamison

"Touched With Fire" by Kay Redfiled Jamison
Manic Depressive Illness and the Artisitc Temperament

"Night Falls Fast" by Kay Redfield Jamison
Understanding Suicide

"Surviving Manic Depression" by E. Fuller Torrey, M.D
and Michael B. Knable, D.O

"Manic Depressive Illness" by Dr.'s Goodwin & Jamison
Note: this is more of a very technical book and very pricey, but was worth the money and reading.

"Hatherleigh Guide to Psycopharacology"
Note: I found this at Borders Books, but I am sure Amazon or any good book store may have it.

The last 2 books I'll mention are more about the lives, narratives, of the author's life experiences.

"The Noonday Demon" by Andrrew Solomon

"Electroboy" by Andy Behrman

There are so many more, too many to list but check in the Psychology sections at Borders, Waldens, Barnes & Nobles, and also try Amazon.com.
Hope you'll find these good for starters Bipolar Recommended Books -- Worth Reading

"darkeyes"



In giving advice seek to help, not please your friend
SOLON
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Anneinside
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Default Dec 14, 2010 at 11:36 PM
  #79
There is a new book by Kay Redfield Jamison called "Nothing was the Same" in which she tells about her husband, their lives together and his death. It deals primarily with grief. I have just started reading it and like it.
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Thanks for this!
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Book Dec 15, 2010 at 02:13 PM
  #80
Hello everyone. Thanks for the reading list. I personally liked Electroboy and Night Falls Fast. I also liked and recommend The Center Cannot Hold, even though it's (mostly) about coping with schizophrenia, because Elyn Saks and I both experienced what is called 'thought broadcasting delusions'.

I also wrote an autobiography that was published this past November. It's about my seventeen year struggle to cope with mental illness. In the 1980s, I was a bipolar child being raised by abusive parents who themselves had undiagnosed mental illnesses. I was diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder, which as many of you know, is a kind of combination of manic depression and schizophrenia. In my case I had the symptoms of bipolar disorder 1 comorbid with schizophrenic tendencies, in addition to PTSD that was caused by years of exposure to a toxic family environment.

Now it's been over fifteen years since I've tried to take my own life. In my book I discuss how I got to a place of balance and acceptance when most of my past was marked by strife and hopelessness. The book also documents my experiences as a ward of the State in the juvenile mental health system, living as a teen in psychiatric residential facilities, group homes for emotionally disturbed adolescents and foster homes. All placements where I met other teens and children like myself. Fair warning: the book does have some triggering events in it. But it also has some of my own personal strategies for dealing with triggers. .

It's called "Possessing Me: A Memoir of Healing" and it was written by me, Jane Alexander. It is available on Amazon. Have a great holiday everyone!

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