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me out of her office.</p><p id="36d3">Dr. Despicable, as we shall call her, listened briefly as I told her what was going on in my head. A few seconds in, she interrupted me.</p><p id="6e12">“I’m very busy,” Dr. Despicable tole me. “You’re depressed. I don’t need to hear anymore.”</p><p id="3d36">She wrote me a prescription for <a href="https://www.rxlist.com/prozac-side-effects-drug-center.htm">Prozac</a> and sent me on my way.</p><p id="59fc">I didn’t know enough then to be offended or concerned. I was 23 and had little experience with doctors. It was the first time I ever discussed my mental health with a medical professional. I was clueless about the evaluation I should have received. Convinced her diploma meant she knew what she was doing, I trusted the “professional” and went on my way.</p><h1 id="d0b1">Sunshine and rainbows</h1><p id="fd0e">It was the mid-1990’s, and everyone seemed to be on Prozac. For a brief time, there seemed to be a little less stigma around mental illness. No doubt a big part of that was the aggressive advertising campaign of the drug company trying to get Prozac into as many homes as possible.</p><p id="9fc4">Prozac was wonderful. It took a few weeks for me to really feel its effect, but after a couple of increases in dosage, I felt great.</p><p id="a3fd">Prozac was a miracle drug, and I told all of my closest friends about it. That circle was small because I was still hiding my mental illness from most people for fear of being judged as weak, unmanly, or as a person without faith. For the few people I felt I could trust, I sang Prozac’s praises every time I opened my mouth.</p><p id="845d">It was a new world, and every day seemed just a little brighter. Colors were a hint sharper, and every emotion was warm and fuzzy. My bipolar mind told me the green and white pills had cured me.</p><figure id="43cd"><img src="https://cdn-images-1.readmedium.com/v2/resize:fit:800/0*6r0e1IAEcx8tvrZd"><figcaption>A guy running with a bullhorn. | Image made by the <a href="https://medium.com/subscribe/@SpeakingBipolar">author</a> with Canva.</figcaption></figure><h1 id="b3b0">Mental illness reality came knocking</h1><p id="4e46">Looking back, I know now that I was living in a mirage. Nothing was well or wonderful. In fact, Prozac is a drug I should <i>never</i> have been prescribed. The modern trend of genetic testing later proved that my body can’t properly metabolize the drug.</p><p id="a384"><b><i>Note:</i></b> I’m not saying Prozac is bad medicine. It has successfully improved the lives of many people with depression. It was simply the wrong medicine for me and for bipolar.</p><p id="9d2d">The euphoria I was experiencing was actually a perpetually manic state. Each dosage increase fanned the flames of the mania. While <a href="https://readmedium.com/mania-is-only-fun-at-the-beginning-and-never-worth-the-price-b49adf4c95f5">being man

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ic can be a lot of fun</a> on the front end, it always comes at a hefty price. That price can be deadly.</p><p id="e776">As time went on, I slept even less than normal. Some of my friends marveled that I never seemed to get tired. Inside, I worried a little about my lack of sleep, but I convinced myself that eight hours of sleep was merely a recommendation, and not all suggestions were right for all people. I was “lucky” enough to be one of those people who needed much less than eight hours.</p><p id="76df">Soon I would learn that luck had nothing to do with it.</p><h1 id="2b01">One voice of reason</h1><p id="120a">During all of this, one of the voices in my head tried to whisper with reason. I expressed its concern to Dr. Despicable about my decreasing need for sleep. Her response was to prescribe tranquilizers to bring me down at night.</p><p id="5a7f">As if I wasn’t already flying down a deadly roller coaster, the new meds only made things worse. Much worse.</p><p id="c5f0">No rainbow lasts forever, and the darkness that followed nearly ended my life. I’ll share some of that darkness and what it led to in my next post.</p><p id="32ce">Until next time, keep fighting.</p><h1 id="8a61">Read Part 7:</h1><div id="046d" class="link-block"> <a href="https://readmedium.com/surviving-bipolar-7-the-night-i-almost-lost-my-battle-abebbb3f9d78"> <div> <div> <h2>Surviving Bipolar 7: The Night I Almost Lost My Battle</h2> <div><h3>Surviving Bipolar is about the beginning of my journey with bipolar disorder.</h3></div> <div><p>medium.com</p></div> </div> <div> <div style="background-image: url(https://miro.readmedium.com/v2/resize:fit:320/0*KeakHymQ4X_BA22F.png)"></div> </div> </div> </a> </div><div id="f127" class="link-block"> <a href="https://readmedium.com/speaking-bipolar-opens-to-new-writers-fa9a3709cd7"> <div> <div> <h2>Speaking Bipolar on Medium Opens to New Writers</h2> <div><h3>Style and submission guide for Speaking Bipolar on Medium.</h3></div> <div><p>medium.com</p></div> </div> <div> <div style="background-image: url(https://miro.readmedium.com/v2/resize:fit:320/1*EPk4DnInc6K8bUSQziX4aw.png)"></div> </div> </div> </a> </div><p id="8751">Sign up for my FREE Sunday <a href="https://speakingbipolar.com/newsletter"><b><i>All Things Bipolar Newsletter</i></b></a> (off-site link) and I’ll send you a few downloadable gifts to improve your life.</p><p id="c965"><i>Originally published at <a href="https://speakingbipolar.com/first-steps-recovery/">https://speakingbipolar.com</a> on June 29, 2019.</i></p></article></body>

Surviving Bipolar 6: Taking the First Steps Towards Recovery With Bipolar Disorder

Continuing the Surviving Bipolar series.

A person jumping across a river bed. | Image made by the author with Canva.

They say that admitting you have a problem is half the battle. Whoever coined that saying obviously did not have mental illness in mind.

Far too often, it feels like the real battle isn’t in seeking care but in trying to find the help that actually makes you better.

Too many bipolar patients stop trying to improve because of the struggle to find that right combination of medications to make life livable without unbearable side effects. They search repeatedly for a doctor who is interested in their wellbeing rather than just someone to throw prescriptions at them.

This post shares the first part of my journey to recovery. As you will see, it got off to a bit of a rocky start.

Surviving Bipolar is a monthly series telling the story of the early days of my journey with bipolar disorder. Read it from the beginning here.

Please note, I am not a mental health professional. Speaking Bipolar is a collection of my experiences of living with illness. If you or a loved one are experiencing mental illness symptoms, please seek professional help immediately.

Becoming part of the Prozac Nation

Last time, I mentioned how I finally opened up to my friends about the struggles I was experiencing. Those struggles included hearing voices, losing time, and having lots of noise in my head.

Opening up to friends was only part of the process. It took months for me to tell my medical doctor about the issues I was experiencing.

Not all doctors are created equal, and it should be illegal for a doctor without mental health training to prescribe medications for mental illness.

I want to believe my doctor had my best interests at heart. I want to believe, but I can’t. Now, decades have passed, and watching her practice grow, it’s been painfully obvious that all she cares about is taking money. The only concern she ever had toward me was in getting me out of her office.

Dr. Despicable, as we shall call her, listened briefly as I told her what was going on in my head. A few seconds in, she interrupted me.

“I’m very busy,” Dr. Despicable tole me. “You’re depressed. I don’t need to hear anymore.”

She wrote me a prescription for Prozac and sent me on my way.

I didn’t know enough then to be offended or concerned. I was 23 and had little experience with doctors. It was the first time I ever discussed my mental health with a medical professional. I was clueless about the evaluation I should have received. Convinced her diploma meant she knew what she was doing, I trusted the “professional” and went on my way.

Sunshine and rainbows

It was the mid-1990’s, and everyone seemed to be on Prozac. For a brief time, there seemed to be a little less stigma around mental illness. No doubt a big part of that was the aggressive advertising campaign of the drug company trying to get Prozac into as many homes as possible.

Prozac was wonderful. It took a few weeks for me to really feel its effect, but after a couple of increases in dosage, I felt great.

Prozac was a miracle drug, and I told all of my closest friends about it. That circle was small because I was still hiding my mental illness from most people for fear of being judged as weak, unmanly, or as a person without faith. For the few people I felt I could trust, I sang Prozac’s praises every time I opened my mouth.

It was a new world, and every day seemed just a little brighter. Colors were a hint sharper, and every emotion was warm and fuzzy. My bipolar mind told me the green and white pills had cured me.

A guy running with a bullhorn. | Image made by the author with Canva.

Mental illness reality came knocking

Looking back, I know now that I was living in a mirage. Nothing was well or wonderful. In fact, Prozac is a drug I should never have been prescribed. The modern trend of genetic testing later proved that my body can’t properly metabolize the drug.

Note: I’m not saying Prozac is bad medicine. It has successfully improved the lives of many people with depression. It was simply the wrong medicine for me and for bipolar.

The euphoria I was experiencing was actually a perpetually manic state. Each dosage increase fanned the flames of the mania. While being manic can be a lot of fun on the front end, it always comes at a hefty price. That price can be deadly.

As time went on, I slept even less than normal. Some of my friends marveled that I never seemed to get tired. Inside, I worried a little about my lack of sleep, but I convinced myself that eight hours of sleep was merely a recommendation, and not all suggestions were right for all people. I was “lucky” enough to be one of those people who needed much less than eight hours.

Soon I would learn that luck had nothing to do with it.

One voice of reason

During all of this, one of the voices in my head tried to whisper with reason. I expressed its concern to Dr. Despicable about my decreasing need for sleep. Her response was to prescribe tranquilizers to bring me down at night.

As if I wasn’t already flying down a deadly roller coaster, the new meds only made things worse. Much worse.

No rainbow lasts forever, and the darkness that followed nearly ended my life. I’ll share some of that darkness and what it led to in my next post.

Until next time, keep fighting.

Read Part 7:

Sign up for my FREE Sunday All Things Bipolar Newsletter (off-site link) and I’ll send you a few downloadable gifts to improve your life.

Originally published at https://speakingbipolar.com on June 29, 2019.

Speaking Bipolar
Bipolar
Mental Health Awareness
Mental Illness
Patient Experience
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