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Legendary Wise Elder
Member Since May 2013
Location: Chicago
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#1
Just wondering if any of you have experienced cognitive decline to the point where you have to change jobs. This is happening to me now. I'm trying to find something a bit simpler that I can enjoy/tolerate for the next twenty years.
Also I was reading this article on cognitive decline in bipolar. It's quite good. https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog...polar-disorder I'm not sure if it's the illness or the antipsychotics but I really can't go off the APs without relapsing. Generally I'm euthymic though so I don't think its a mood issue for me. Mostly my memory and overall comprehension of new material is failing, better to learn something new before it fails entirely. I'm leaning away from science and toward IT help desk but even that is challenging. Just wondering what your experiences have been...I don't think I'm alone in this.... __________________ Hugs! |
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Fuzzybear
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BipolaRNurse
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Silver Swan
Member Since Jan 2008
Location: USA
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#2
Interesting blog post. I call this "brain bad" when it happens to me.
__________________ Ingrezza 80 mg Propranolol 40 mg Benztropine 1 mg Vraylar 1.5 mg, Gabapentin 300 Mania Sept/Oct 2024 Mania (July/August 2024) Mania (December 2023) Mixed episode/Hypomania (September 2023) Depression, Anxiety and Intrusive thoughts (September 2021) Depression & Psychosis (July/August 2021) Mania (April/May 2019) |
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Sometimes psychotic
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Member
Member Since Jan 2017
Location: coldville
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#3
This last line scares me:
And even in the absence of dazzling research outcomes, there’s the old adage that tells us “we grow wiser as we grow older.” It’s true. The role of maturation across the lifespan provides us with more potential for growth and healthy adaptation than most would ever imagine Im in my 40s and have totally gone backwards in mental growth and health. I peaked mid-30s and literally feel myself decaying both mentally and physically. |
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Sometimes psychotic
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Legendary Wise Elder
Member Since May 2013
Location: Chicago
Posts: 26,424
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11 22.8k hugs
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#4
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Member
Member Since Jan 2017
Location: coldville
Posts: 310
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#5
Quote:
As for mental, I cant even read a book anymore which is scary as I was a book nerd most of my life. Im just hoping all the lessons learned can be used when Im feeling better from our disease as have a really rough run this year. |
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Sometimes psychotic
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Magnate
Member Since Jul 2017
Location: 3rd rock from Sun
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#6
I have been programming for over 35 years. Ever hear that old adage (meant as a compliment) "he has forgotten more than most people know" ? That is me. I feel like I am hanging on by a thread sometimes but it is because I hold a senior level position. I am supposed to be the guy who can come up with a solution when no one else can. There is a reasonable chance that my position won't be funded next year. If that happens, I might be looking one rung down from where I am now. I probably only have 5-6 years to go. My plan for decades has been 1/1/2023, which is a little over 5.
__________________ | |Up and down |And in the end it's only round and round |Pink Floyd - Us and Them | |bipolar II, substance use disorder, ADD |lamictal, straterra | |
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Sometimes psychotic
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Sometimes psychotic
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Legendary Wise Elder
Member Since May 2013
Location: Chicago
Posts: 26,424
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11 22.8k hugs
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#7
Quote:
I'm kind of a mid-tier scientist but they won't hire you for easier positions once you have a PhD....it just doesn't happen and I can't be like oh well I can't think anymore so how about it? __________________ Hugs! |
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Legendary Wise Elder
Member Since May 2013
Location: Chicago
Posts: 26,424
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11 22.8k hugs
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#8
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BipolaRNurse
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Magnate
Member Since Feb 2006
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#9
It was a good read. Thanks for sharing that.
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Sometimes psychotic
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Neurodivergent
Member Since Mar 2012
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#10
That was some article. I recognized so much of myself in it and kept going "yep, yep, yep" as I read. I am cognitively disabled to the point where I lost my last job (over 3 years ago) because I could NOT learn the computer program. No matter how hard I try, I can't memorize much of anything, nor can I focus on reading for longer than a few minutes. It is supremely frustrating because I used to have such a good mind, and now I can't even work because I'd have to be able to learn new things. Ugh.
__________________ DX: Bipolar 1 Anxiety Tardive dyskinesia Mild cognitive impairment RX: Celexa 20 mg Gabapentin 1200 mg Geodon 40 mg AM, 60 mg PM Klonopin 0.5 mg PRN Lamictal 500 mg Levothyroxine 125 mcg (rx'd for depression) Trazodone 150 mg Zyprexa 7.5 mg Please come visit me @ http://bpnurse.com |
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Sometimes psychotic
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Magnate
Member Since Jul 2017
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#11
Quote:
EDIT - I thought of a way to explain thinking without words. Quarterbacks do it all the time. Going through their reads, sensing pressure and scrambling, dumping a pass off to a back after a pump fake to keep it from being batted down. They don't think through those decisions with words. __________________ | |Up and down |And in the end it's only round and round |Pink Floyd - Us and Them | |bipolar II, substance use disorder, ADD |lamictal, straterra | Last edited by UpDownAround; Sep 22, 2017 at 09:02 AM.. |
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Sometimes psychotic
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Legendary Wise Elder
Member Since May 2013
Location: Chicago
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#12
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Member
Member Since Sep 2017
Location: KY
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#13
I identify with this article very much. I have only within the last month started medical treatment/become diagnostically aware that my mood/symptoms describe BP type II.
I was always the 'whiz kid' when I was younger and through my late 30s or so I had an incredible capacity for knowledge, memory and recall (I'm going on 42 now). I've sadly come to realize that within the past few years I have more difficulty with executive functioning (never been great at that stuff anyway), reading comprehension/recall and following verbal instructions (sometimes written ones as well). Used to read voraciously, now I have no interest mood-wise and also because it has become harder/less relaxing to make progress and hold on to what I've read. I attributed it for a while to daily marijuana use starting in my mid 30s and so did my wife, who has noticed some memory loss herself. But there hasn't been any real improvement since I stopped smoking 5 weeks ago. I read in the article that those who have managed this illness medically over the course of their lives have less degradation of these abilities. Those who haven't tend to have less favorable outlook both cognitively and mentally. My personal cognitive decline scares me because I most certainly have not managed my disease at all, in fact was unaware/refusing to consistency see a doctor about my physical and mental health for a couple decades. When I mention it to my providers they are more apt to say this is ADHD, and I like the comfort of their conclusion. But I think I know deep down that while I might have had untreated ADHD (poor executive function, primarily) for years, the cognitive stuff is related to my mental illness because it is much more recent. This thought troubles me very much because I have three dependents and I don't have the option of seeking less-challenging employment. |
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99fairies
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99fairies
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Legendary Wise Elder
Member Since May 2013
Location: Chicago
Posts: 26,424
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#14
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I hope your job gets funded __________________ Hugs! |
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99fairies
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Legendary Wise Elder
Member Since May 2013
Location: Chicago
Posts: 26,424
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11 22.8k hugs
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#15
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99fairies
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Magnate
Member Since Jul 2017
Location: 3rd rock from Sun
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#16
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I am not sure about the ADHD component of my dx. I have straterra in the mix because I abused adderall (no more stimulants for me) and it does help. Prior to this year, my meds were ADs and stimulants because I denied the BP dx and engineered a MDD and ADHD dx instead. I did also take some hypnotics because of insomnia (hypermanic episodes in hindsight). I liked the stimulants; they helped lift me out of the low grade funk that was my "center". __________________ | |Up and down |And in the end it's only round and round |Pink Floyd - Us and Them | |bipolar II, substance use disorder, ADD |lamictal, straterra | |
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