Being Bipolar: Flying & Crashing (Mental Health Documentary) | Only Human

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 8. 12. 2016
  • One minute you’re up and the next you’re down. But what if those ups were manias, generating feelings of omnipotence and invincibility? And what if those downs were depressions so stark, that you were left feeling immobile and even suicidal? Psychotherapist Philippa Perry explores the condition known as Bipolar Disorder from the perspective of those living with it. Speaking to three very different individuals who each suffer from their own unique case of Bipolar Disorder, Philippa examines various explanations for the condition; from genetics to life experiences and looks at the variety of treatments used; from prescription drugs to alternative therapies and treatments.
    Like our content? Support us by becoming a member! bit.ly/JoinOnlyHuman
    Only Human celebrates and explores the unique and personal qualities we all have.
    Our channel offers a range of TV series and documentaries about human experiences and life journeys - while looking at the challenges life throws at us, turning ordinary people into everyday heroes.
    Subscribe for new releases of full episodes and documentaries every week:
    bit.ly/CZcamsOnlyHuman
    Follow us on Facebook: / onlyhumanchannel
    Follow us on Instagram: / onlyhumanldn
    Follow us on Twitter: / onlyhumanldn
    Bipolar: Flying & Crashing (Mental Health Documentary) | Only Human
    Any queries, please contact us at:
    owned-enquiries@littledotstudios.com
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 2K

  • @daynademontagnac4694
    @daynademontagnac4694 Před 4 lety +1186

    Can’t imagine shifting from high energy to a depressive state so fast. I really respect those who have to go through it. Hope they continue to stay strong.

    • @tiasan-norton3119
      @tiasan-norton3119 Před 4 lety +16

      This is so lovely x

    • @donnaholman4538
      @donnaholman4538 Před 4 lety +60

      Dayna de Montagnac thank you! You don’t have any idea how most people think about us and use our illness against us. You are a rare beautiful gem!!!

    • @forestrot666
      @forestrot666 Před 4 lety +31

      That's lovely of you,because it is very very difficult. Sometimes it just bitch slaps you out of nowhere. X

    • @carriewilliams6707
      @carriewilliams6707 Před 4 lety +32

      I wish more ppl were as compassionate and empathetic as you! Thank you

    • @avalucia6039
      @avalucia6039 Před 4 lety +16

      Dayna de Montagnac its constant battle every single day. :,(

  • @ryanm4769
    @ryanm4769 Před 3 lety +250

    14:07 they did him dirty. making him look like he was crazy rocking back and forth in the beginning, but now we know he was showing off his music....

    • @t-bone8976
      @t-bone8976 Před 3 lety +22

      Bruh yeah, they didn’t have to do him like that....

    • @nihil8436
      @nihil8436 Před 3 lety +5

      @Matityahu they even made resistance to accept "treatment" a symptom of severe mental illness.

    • @pjsmith2744
      @pjsmith2744 Před 3 lety +7

      I rock back and forth man I'm not crazy though I have bi-polar type 2.

    • @nihil8436
      @nihil8436 Před 3 lety

      @@pjsmith2744 are you taking psych drugs?

    • @pjsmith2744
      @pjsmith2744 Před 3 lety

      @@nihil8436 Yep.

  • @jodeedugger7570
    @jodeedugger7570 Před 3 lety +60

    To all my fellow Bipolar suffers I love y’all so much it takes a heck of a strong person to live with the diagnosis we live with👊🏻💜💜💜

    • @nothinwatever
      @nothinwatever Před rokem +2

      I don’t want to be strong I want to be normal 😢 (literally balling rn)

  • @sh4m4npi7ot9
    @sh4m4npi7ot9 Před 4 lety +535

    Love that Paul guy. He's got a foot in 2 worlds and can still look after his Mum. That's what you call character!

    • @detroitfettyghost8492
      @detroitfettyghost8492 Před 4 lety +10

      @John toetag Amazingly amazing comment left me.....well AMAZED! !!

    • @karimaogden3875
      @karimaogden3875 Před 4 lety +2

      Couldn't help but notice that Irene,Paul's mom has better teeth than Paul. Doubt that they are her own though!. Most likely they are dentures but either way, they look better.

    • @marietanner7538
      @marietanner7538 Před 3 lety +11

      Even though he has these grandiose notions, they're good hearted notions...sounds like he wants to help others suffering in his own way

    • @lukemaccallum3150
      @lukemaccallum3150 Před 3 lety

      Noe Marquez totally agree bro

    • @susanburgess820
      @susanburgess820 Před 3 lety +2

      Agreed😄😄😄👏👏👏

  • @raziax9603
    @raziax9603 Před 3 lety +143

    I was diagnosed with C-ptsd and dissociation. Seriously, it doesn't matter what you're suffering with, it's all hell.

    • @gg_pearl3889
      @gg_pearl3889 Před 3 lety +3

      Hey can I ask.
      I know about ptsd. I thought dissociation was a symptom how does it effect you and is this a disorder in its self. I hope you are well x

    • @mascara1777
      @mascara1777 Před 3 lety

      Have you tried brainspotting for ptsd ?

    • @carnifex8
      @carnifex8 Před 3 lety +4

      Depression + panic/anxiety here. It's hell on earth. Dissociation/depersonalization/derealization also is quite common for me on my menu list lol. I've spent so far 3months depersonalized but drugs are starting to bring me back. I wouldn't wish this on my worst enemy. It's basically.. a death sentence. It's like you're dead, empty, no thoughts or too much thoughts, constant anxiety out of nowhere, even your voice sounds like not yours, your body feels numb/gone or like not yours at all, like you don't really exist anymore.. anxiety can do so much crazy stuff to you that sometimes you're afraid you're actually schizo.. hell. I dont even wanna think and write about it. I'd say the same as that woman. If not for drugs i'd be dead.

    • @melissadove4664
      @melissadove4664 Před 3 lety

      Amen to that

    • @toiy6556
      @toiy6556 Před 3 lety +1

      I thought cptsd is not included in the dsm????? The most relevant diagnosis would be bpd borderline personality disorder, which many psychiatrist see as a form of bpd and are considering changing the term bpd to cptsd. This change has not uet been made.

  • @honeybun8259
    @honeybun8259 Před 4 lety +590

    Im bipolar I don't enjoy doing anything anymore. And my meds don't help. I stay depressed all the time but have to act happy around family. It's a hard life to live 😢

    • @isoldewasduhn
      @isoldewasduhn Před 4 lety +37

      I bet they know that there´s something wrong with you, so they try to keep up an act to make you happy. Nobody will get anything out of this. I found that honesty with your feelings and staying true to your mood is the best medicine. but i´m very well asure how bitter and scarry it is! I wish you all the best, hope you feel better soon! See you again on the manic side.

    • @honeybun8259
      @honeybun8259 Před 4 lety +15

      @@isoldewasduhn Thank you Sascha
      I appreciate that very much. Hope you are well . Yea my new Dr. Does not prescribe the medication very well . She's lowered my dosage on my bipolar med to one a day. Im suppose to take 2 in morn and 2 at nite. I been on it so long it doesn't work anymore . And they really don't listen. They run in and out because there's only one Dr . For a lot of patients 😢💖

    • @isoldewasduhn
      @isoldewasduhn Před 4 lety +20

      @@honeybun8259 Yeah, I´m just getting out of a depression. Hid my "sad feelings" from my family, fell into a dark pit. That´s why your post jumped right at me. I tried meds but I found out they confuse me more with their side effects than actually help me understandig. Now I try educating my self, learning to trust my feelings and verbalizing what my needs are. That helps me most. But sure is a damn rocky path. Sounds like you living in a Country where you only have few options for treatment? That sucks. I live in Austria, we have great health care, also for the soul ;) But for now, all the Therropists I´ve seen, tryed to fix me like I was a machine which has to work in the "Factory of Life". I don´t wan´t to be fixed, I want to understand how to heal! I hope there is someone you can trust in your live, more than that, I hope you are the person you trust the most!

    • @honeybun8259
      @honeybun8259 Před 4 lety +8

      @@isoldewasduhn yes I live in the country in the sticks lol
      My Dr . Is an hr away from me and I have no car so.i.have to find a ride which is very hard cause I live way out in the woods in.TX I had 2 ladies that used to come out here, social.workers and then they said I was out of the jurisdiction so I got all messed up cause they would bring me to Dr's appts all the good Dr's are mostly in Houston
      And now I don't have a therapist. So I just do the best I can . I find meditation works well for me. I listen to it evernite to go sleep. And they have great music for stress , anxiety etc... I listen to Kenneth Soales and Yellow Brick Cinema a lot. I hope you do.well and thank you for listening my friend. 💕💕

    • @GloomGaiGar
      @GloomGaiGar Před 4 lety +4

      You won't find any help here, sadly. Hope things go well for you.

  • @KB-mp1mw
    @KB-mp1mw Před 4 lety +34

    I'm bipolar. Staying on meds is key.

  • @druzyonyx9046
    @druzyonyx9046 Před 3 lety +17

    I was diagnosed bipolar 1 since a young age.... My parents refused to get me help. And when I turned 21, I was taken under an EDO during a manic state to a hospital. Honestly, thank you for those police officers and nurses and Drs. I now have the right set of meds and receive ECT to help manage day to day basic and more.

  • @unmovingminds1457
    @unmovingminds1457 Před 4 lety +205

    I feel for anybody with this illness, I have bipolar type 2, a lot of my time is spent in deep depressive episodes and I deal with it on my own as well. Stay focused people it’s hard as hell but we can master it eventually.

    • @hollyhocks7360
      @hollyhocks7360 Před 4 lety +4

      That must be very hard for you. I hope you get support from friends or family. My niece is bipolar and we try and support her as a family. Good luck and wishing you the very best.

    • @unmovingminds1457
      @unmovingminds1457 Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you 🙏

    • @sarawilkinson6766
      @sarawilkinson6766 Před 4 lety +2

      Hugs, I hear you x

    • @robh4713
      @robh4713 Před 4 lety +3

      Here if you need someone to talk to, I too suffer with my mental health. Might help me at the same time 🙂

    • @D_skeptic
      @D_skeptic Před 4 lety +10

      You absolutely can master it. I have bipolar type 1 so I had both the highs, lows, & even some mixed episodes. For me, it was all about finding the right mix of medication. I take Lithium to stabalize my mood, Seroquel for sleep, Buspirone for anxiety, & Effexor for depression. It sounds like quite a list but it works. I am now able to function l normally. I still struggle with mild anxiety & insomnia from time to time but thats about it. And its nothing like what I used to deal with. Back then I'd go 3-4 days without sleeping during a manic phase (which was a bitch). The other thing I had to learn to manage my condition was to stay away from alcohol & drugs. Even certain perscription medications like prednisone have to be avoided. It takes time to figure what does & does not work for you but please don't give up. There is a way back to happiness & normalcy. I graduated college a couple years ago (with honors) & bought my first home so I did something right.

  • @monicdavis6150
    @monicdavis6150 Před 4 lety +102

    Poor Ashley, I can’t imagine having to live like this.

    • @TheTimekeeper011
      @TheTimekeeper011 Před 3 lety +1

      I’m a rapid cycler like Ashley. I’ll have a high for an hour or two hours and then immediately switch and drop into a deep suicidal depression for a few hours. Then I’m fine. And it wipes you out so much that all I can do it sleep. This all happens almost weekly. And I’m fully medicated. I was a daily cycler without meds, and my highs were higher and my lows were lower. And the other lady was spot on. Without our medications most of us bipolars would have given up a long time ago. Including me. It impacts so many areas of our lives. I’ve even had the talk with my partner that I don’t know that if I can have a child knowing they have an increased chance of bipolar. I would never want to put them through this.

    • @doga1996
      @doga1996 Před 3 lety

      @@TheTimekeeper011 please do not give birth to a child for your and their sake. Girl, dont get me wrong but we all know that we cannot even take care of ourselves, so it is really less likely for us to be capable of raising children. I hope you understood what i meant. Btw, take care of yourself, dont u ever give up on yourself, your life. Everyone's life matter. We still can go on and have a almost normal life i believe. I hope we all will get better by time. Have a nice day or night.

    • @TheTimekeeper011
      @TheTimekeeper011 Před 3 lety

      @@doga1996 I do understand what you mean. Having children of my own has always been my dream. I still have some treatment options. But I know, taking on the responsibility of a parent is something I don’t take lightly. I do want to be better before I consider it. What I also think about is that I didn’t have someone there that understood me growing up. My parents aren’t bipolar and never dealt with depression, but I have (they were still supportive and helped). So any kids I have will have a parent that they can turn to and they will understand them. Life’s not easy huh?

  • @jessm5506
    @jessm5506 Před 4 lety +55

    Ashley seemed like he was rapid cycling through his emotions like a borderline. I have CPTSD and BPD, and it feels like a rollercoaster of emotions you can't get off of. You change emotions so quickly that you feel removed from yourself afterwards. I've removed myself from public and most of my family because they don't understand my disorder. They look at me when I'm symptomatic and say, " stay away from her, she's having a bipolar moment". It's frustrating.

    • @ashleighdisston342
      @ashleighdisston342 Před 2 lety +1

      Just be you. Find a support system that is SUPPORTIVE AND UNDERSTANDING of what you do go through. Your family might not understand and that's okay, so do not go to them for your supportive needs. It's unfair to you, because they will not be able to .... it seems.
      Yes you might have some bad days, but you will also have good days. The good days take advantage and push yourself, and the bad days allow yourself to not be okay. It is okay to not be okay!!
      There are people that do understand and can be there for you a

    • @samiosamiro404
      @samiosamiro404 Před 2 lety +1

      That Sounds horribe :( ... Why would Ur Family say Something Like this. I have BPD as Well and i give U all the strength and Love in the world to become Happy on a daily basis eventually and find people who Care a Lot about you. I do already

    • @tanyajacobs9974
      @tanyajacobs9974 Před 6 měsíci

      I was going to say that it sounded.more.lile.BPD
      Very very difficult condition. I think my son has it but has been diagnosed with some other disorders

  • @avalucia6039
    @avalucia6039 Před 4 lety +37

    Unless you have it , you have no idea how it feels.

  • @Anna-ok9vx
    @Anna-ok9vx Před 4 lety +21

    Paul reminds me of my Dad, I've really been missing him lately. My Dad always had plans to build amazing things, I miss it,

  • @karenhetherington9358
    @karenhetherington9358 Před 4 lety +63

    God bless Ashley, I feel for him, he is such a lovely lad. He has wonderful, loving parents, hope he finds his niche in life. 💙

    • @cassandraharris442
      @cassandraharris442 Před 4 lety +2

      @@danielgerber608 He takes Valium already. It is similar to those, I would think.

  • @laurenashley482
    @laurenashley482 Před 4 lety +36

    I’ve just recently decided to go to a doctor for my Bipolar disorder and seeing this made me feel more understood and less alone❤️

    • @kresivarivkah612
      @kresivarivkah612 Před 3 lety +1

      Very good. I did, too. I am on Lithium.
      How are you feeling?

    • @Blank_sp8ce1234
      @Blank_sp8ce1234 Před 2 lety +1

      I’m so happy for you hun. I wish you nothing but the best for your recovery ❤️

  • @catherinestanley2218
    @catherinestanley2218 Před 4 lety +546

    There's plenty of people who've experienced trauma in the past who aren't bipolar.

    • @bobhill2483
      @bobhill2483 Před 4 lety +68

      Trauma itself will not cause psychological disorder. It is caused by mix of many different things, especially our beliefs and learned (pathological) patterns of thinking and behaviour when dealing with painful experiences. The same way having biological parents with disorder will not cause it but observing them and learning from them (copying pathological patterns) will greatly increase the risk.

    • @daisychainmilk
      @daisychainmilk Před 4 lety +27

      Exactly. I've had extensive trauma and I've never suffered from bipolar or anything and its more likely for me to be able to have it since my biological father is bipolar. I know many people who have experienced trauma as well who arent bipolar. This documentary is so ignorant especially the part about psychiatric medication.

    • @JP-gb3mq
      @JP-gb3mq Před 4 lety +34

      Lol trauma can’t cause BP, it’s simply a catalyst to potentially expose it in an individual

    • @veronicabrowne2132
      @veronicabrowne2132 Před 4 lety +38

      And plenty of people who are bipolar who have never experienced trauma.

    • @Spore5006
      @Spore5006 Před 4 lety +3

      I think the point being made here is that; like most(all?) conditions, there is an nature and a nurture. The best addicts are the ones who have a family lineage of it, as well as severe trauma in childhood. However, you can still be an addict and have little to no trauma to some degree, arguably not as extreme as those with trauma.
      That being said, you can have bipolar say 1 or 2 and manage it with meds and some DBT or whatever with no trauma. And in the case of Ashlee, his involved lots of trauma and had the arguably more debilitating form of BP 3 as well as having another component with his autism and not socializing/integrating well.

  • @ganiaj87
    @ganiaj87 Před 4 lety +27

    This is so sad. I have some friends that are bipolar, all of them stopped taking their meds because they said they felt zombi-ish and suicidal. I'm super proud of them tho as they have great careers and manage their illness with tenacity & positivity.

    • @gabe-po9yi
      @gabe-po9yi Před 8 měsíci +2

      @ganiaj87. Yes, and a lot of bipolar stopped taking meds because they miss the highs where they’re filled with energy, creativity, ideas for the future, etc. It’s been speculated that many highly creative, successful performers might be on the manic spectrum.

    • @ganiaj87
      @ganiaj87 Před 8 měsíci

      @@gabe-po9yi Agreed

  • @FeralKimchi
    @FeralKimchi Před 4 lety +643

    Surprised that the psychotherapist was so ignorant on psychiatric medications. I know psychotherapists don't prescribe but she should have SOME basic knowledge about the meds that many of her patients/clients are taking. She seemed to want to blame everything on trauma and environmental causes. "If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail."

    • @milliejohnson4994
      @milliejohnson4994 Před 4 lety +60

      I thought I was the only one that noticed this, she seemed so close-minded to medication and the idea that bipolar can be caused by genetics etc.

    • @NatashaSoupy
      @NatashaSoupy Před 4 lety +20

      I agree. My therapist doesn't know a lot about psychiatric meds and it concerns me, especially now I'm experimenting trying to find the right one for me.

    • @orientalshorthaircats
      @orientalshorthaircats Před 4 lety +21

      I also think she's too willing to jump to conclusions based on 3 people

    • @moarroz
      @moarroz Před 4 lety +25

      @@NatashaSoupy ive only done a few yrs of psych studies and i know all of the meds for every illness including in the field of neurology. I don't think I'd trust anyone who doesn't have basic pharmacology knowledge of what's paired with what illness. Are you in the UK or US?
      She might need a refresher course cuz over here each medication and treatment is taught in like psych 101 lmao

    • @jojozepofthejungle2655
      @jojozepofthejungle2655 Před 4 lety +12

      Self awareness cured me, I wouldn't take those meds, not being able to remember the day before isn't any kind of cure.

  • @EllicottCity1
    @EllicottCity1 Před 3 lety +6

    Three very brave people willing to be filmed & educate others 👏 My dearest best friend has bipolar, my heart aches for her at times 💔

  • @rinmay1769
    @rinmay1769 Před 4 lety +249

    She looks like she is straight out of a Tim Burton movie

    • @vevict
      @vevict Před 3 lety +4

      Her hair is definitely a look

    • @paulmcdonough1093
      @paulmcdonough1093 Před 3 lety

      bad karma on its way to you for that comment its a serious subject ,

    • @rinmay1769
      @rinmay1769 Před 3 lety

      @@paulmcdonough1093 why so much hate, dude

    • @JimmiAlli
      @JimmiAlli Před 3 lety +2

      She looks lovely

  • @stephaniepoleson8891
    @stephaniepoleson8891 Před 4 lety +86

    This lady seems very compassionate and helpful however I’d be concerned about questioning whether a person is bipolar or not. Bipolar is a serious illness. If I didn’t take my meds I’d be a suicide risk,or dangerously hypomanic. I also see a psychotherapist and this too continues to save my life. Perhaps there is no one size fits all regarding treatment. Just don’t talk people out of taking their meds.

  • @rubyvanderkuil6803
    @rubyvanderkuil6803 Před 5 lety +181

    They talk about being bipolar rather than having bipolar. We are people. Just like you have a broken leg, you arent a broken leg. And yes, we can live meds free, with the right help and support from professionals. Im lowering my meds right now.

    • @notkaitlyn5368
      @notkaitlyn5368 Před 4 lety +20

      Ruby van der Kuil some can’t live without meds if the condition is worse enough.

    • @rubyvanderkuil6803
      @rubyvanderkuil6803 Před 4 lety +8

      @@notkaitlyn5368 yes and I am one of those 😇 but I am trying to get lower quantities. Its amazing that it exists, but its not fair to say that everyone needs meds tho

    • @maggimadison9253
      @maggimadison9253 Před 4 lety +29

      This is absolutely false. I was diagnosed at 12 with bipolar and NO I CANNOT survive without my meds. I have severe bipolar rage where I black out in a rage and would absolutely become either homicidal or suicidal. If you’re able to function without meds on bipolar you have a VERY mild form or you’re not actually bipolar. It’s caused by a chemical imbalance in the brain and you 100% need medication to maintain proper levels in the brain or you cannot function in society and maintain that functionality in life. Do NOT encourage people to eliminate or reduce medication, it’s irresponsible and frankly quite dangerous for 99% of people who have bipolar! It’s quite common for people with bipolar to stabilize on meds and then think they don’t need meds anymore because they’re “fixed” but that’s 100% false and leads to many many more episodes that increase in severity without medication to get them stabilized again.

    • @rubyvanderkuil6803
      @rubyvanderkuil6803 Před 4 lety +9

      @@maggimadison9253 I do not mean no one needs meds, im am just saying that simply saying everyone needs them is incorrect. And believe me I do not have a light or mild form and I am 100% sure I do have bipolar disorder. But with years and years of psychiatry since I was a child, I learned to libe with it. In fact, I think it is a miracle since you are completely right about the dependency of medication, it is just not true for everyone.

    • @Ang3lBag3l
      @Ang3lBag3l Před 4 lety +5

      Maggi Madison and it’s actually true. You can be bipolar and not need meds. Depends on how severe. Still bipolar ?

  • @theonewiththeface6258
    @theonewiththeface6258 Před 3 lety +2

    As a person who suffers greatly from BPII thank you so much for bringing light to our disease. It's truly a difficult life to live. We live because of people's kindness when our mind is telling us we shouldn't be here.

  • @kaijuk
    @kaijuk Před 2 lety +6

    As someone diagnosed with BPD and PTSD I'd like to say I feel for everyone here looking for an answer or information on their condition and I wish you all the very best in body and mind, I understand and hope you get the help you need to overcome... Much love ❣️

  • @tonid7522
    @tonid7522 Před 3 lety +12

    I’m bipolar and have been taking meds since I was in my early twenties. I hate it but I have been able to be successful and obtain a master’s degree. I still have symptoms and it’s not easy. I just refuse to stop and give in to it.

  • @Scotty_Russell_Music
    @Scotty_Russell_Music Před 4 lety +11

    Philippa Perry seems lovely, some of the comments in here seem like they're from people who've not had these sort of issues. Sometimes you just need to talk stuff out of your head and have it repeated to you, it helps you calm down and start to make sense of it. Being given positive encouragement is so important, she seems endlessly sympathetic which is so valuable. She also has the humility to admit we don't have all the answers. I like her.

  • @zoe09270
    @zoe09270 Před 3 lety +1

    I hope they all continue to be strong but my heart truly goes out to Ashley. Such a kind soul.

  • @harlietalland7586
    @harlietalland7586 Před 3 lety +2

    I have bipolar disorder and finally want to see more about it. Educate myself and feel less alone in a way. I think its important to see others with the same mental illness. It's validating.

  • @VaeVictisXIII
    @VaeVictisXIII Před 4 lety +107

    "have you had any drugs?"
    *ignores the fact he's been smoking several joints throughout their first meeting*

  • @pinklotus2443
    @pinklotus2443 Před 5 lety +39

    how can that one lady have been suffering with biopolar for so long and taking all those meds but never seen a psychologist? u need to do both together, thats so strange to me

    • @jameslivesey8322
      @jameslivesey8322 Před 5 lety +2

      NHS resources are pretty stretched, as they are in every single country for mental health. Even if you do have resources available: What medication combination do you take? there are literally millions. What kind of therapy do you take? there are tons of different kinds. Male of female therapist? do you get on with them? too much or too little? are they too impractically far away? it's so difficult and so expensive to find what's right for you.

    • @emmestein
      @emmestein Před 4 lety +3

      Seeing a psychiatrist has never done anything for me really. I’ve tried all available treatments for half of my life now, without any success. The only thing that has helped partially is medication. Seeing a psychologist doesn’t help all people.

  • @vitocorleone1462
    @vitocorleone1462 Před 4 lety +25

    My Dad is a bipolar alcoholic and I wasn't raised properly at all. I feel like my Dad has the brain of a 15 yo at the age of 53. He once had a real estate agent over to look at his house, and he lead her to the garage and they sat in his brand new mustang (that he could not afford) and he started revving it to show of. Like I said he is 53.

    • @MissGold888
      @MissGold888 Před 3 lety

      I’m sure that’s all they did...

    • @vitocorleone1462
      @vitocorleone1462 Před 3 lety +1

      @@MissGold888 Oh no she's older and really fat. Definitely not his type hahaha

  • @yougotaluvme
    @yougotaluvme Před rokem +1

    Been sick and watching a lot. Of CZcams about mental and chronic illness. It really have open. My mind, eyes and heart. I come to realize, life isn't all about oneself.

  • @aleigh-xe3pc
    @aleigh-xe3pc Před 4 lety +30

    My friend with bi-polar thought he didnt need his meds anymore and and stopped taking them. He went from disappearing for days on end spending a huge amount of money and going who knows where in a manic fit with his wife calling freaking out not knowing where he was at all hours of the night to 2 weeks later he left his house at 7 am got a hotel room and hung himself. His wife had to find him like that after his business partner woke up and was looking at their bank records and saw the hotel booking and alerted her about it. I don't personally care why meds work, all I know is if he hadn't stopped taking them he would still be alive right now so please if you are prescribed medication for your mental health no matter how much you think you are okay without them dont stop without professional help and support 💕

    • @lindahouston9331
      @lindahouston9331 Před 4 lety +1

      I agree. If the medicine is only blocking the symptoms, at least that's a positive change. This woman seems to want to prove a point at the expense of her patients wellbeing!

  • @mothcorrupteth
    @mothcorrupteth Před 4 lety +16

    The bipolar diagnosis _is_ useful, because it helps you find other people with experiences that are closer to yours than the average person. I get what Perry is saying, and even as a bipolar I understand that she's saying it with nuance. At the same time, I want to be clear that there are aspects of all three interviewees that I can relate to, even if I can't relate to all symptoms of everyone. And that's helpful, because as the program mentions, with bipolar you feel very much alone in the world. You feel like you're speaking English, but nobody else can understand you for reasons you just can't comprehend at the time. I always recover better from an episode when I explore other bipolars' experiences, because then I _don't_ feel alone.

  • @aprillockabyradford3679
    @aprillockabyradford3679 Před 4 lety +8

    Gosh how sad. I suffer from depression and anxiety, and it is sad seeing others suffer and not know what to do.

  • @findfit3284
    @findfit3284 Před 3 lety +2

    Bipolar can make everyday things, much more difficult and unpredictable for a person. This is why it is extremely important to have a supportive environment, when you are battling with mental illnesses to this extreme.

  • @lindsaysheffield
    @lindsaysheffield Před 4 lety +183

    I have bipolar, type II, rapid cycling (like Ashley). Yes, I have past trauma, and I see a therapist. BUT, in my case, time and time again, we’ve seen that once we put me on anti-epileptics (“mood stabilizers”) I am immediately fine, and stay that way for years...like, 10 years. It’s only been when those are changed/withdrawn that there’s been any problem. That said, I have several other neurological problems (some genetic, some from injury), so my case is a bit more complex.
    My undergrad was in neuropsych, and I went into pharmacy, so the biological/psychosocial debate intrigues me. With all I’ve seen, I think it really just depends on the individual, and ultimately the focus should be on getting them functional.

    • @lizhenson4563
      @lizhenson4563 Před 4 lety +9

      Lindsay Sheffield I got put on an anti epileptic mood stabilizer called lamictal and I honestly feel like it’s put me in a constant state of mania but in a positive way.

    • @hopebister6386
      @hopebister6386 Před 4 lety +1

      Amen

    • @amyp.575
      @amyp.575 Před 4 lety +1

      Bipolar can't cycle in one day.

    • @amyp.575
      @amyp.575 Před 4 lety +2

      Sounds more like autism or Borderline Personality Disorder

    • @lindsaysheffield
      @lindsaysheffield Před 4 lety +3

      @@amyp.575 BPD has been ruled out, but when I was in undergrad a prof that specialized in psych testing was like "umm, I can't dx you but have you ever looked into female Asperger's traits?" It really does fit, even down to the texture/feeding issues as a kid. I started realizing when I got out of academia where my weirdness was praised and into workplaces where I "didn't understand" people. Started reading a lot on boards and honestly the "skills" for Autism are way more helpful than bipolar ones. I just don't want to pay all that for an official dx, since I'm disabled and just volunteer where I'm liked.

  • @LizzieJD
    @LizzieJD Před 4 lety +5

    Ashley you are a lovely person, and intelligent too. I hope all the best for you and your nice family, who clearly love you so much.

  • @missindependent5535
    @missindependent5535 Před 4 lety +66

    Like Ashley I am on the autism spectrum, but as a child I was misdiagnosed with bipolar disorder. I was the scapegoat in my family due to this. I have undergone terrible trauma. I don't believe bipolar is his true diagnosis.

    • @margicates553
      @margicates553 Před 3 lety +1

      That was my suspicion as soon as I saw him.
      I was diagnosed as bipolar 2 for a year before we came around to autism and trauma.
      Once I got off the meds, the mania left me.

    • @catherineolivia1
      @catherineolivia1 Před 3 lety

      @@margicates553 Mine too.

    • @dorian1491
      @dorian1491 Před 2 lety

      Same

  • @vix_xie
    @vix_xie Před 3 lety +2

    They are battling an invisible disease that is extremely challenging. Sending healing love to them

  • @tandysaysyoucandoanything6758

    Someone should encourage Paul to write a book. His imagination is amazing

  • @alessandroricciardi7317
    @alessandroricciardi7317 Před 4 lety +175

    I totally get the psychotherapist’s point of view, but she looks very stubborn and unprepared on the biological causes and psychiatry in general, so I would never trust her as a patient.
    I suffer from cyclothymia and I’ve had it all my life, which is a very mild form of bipolarism and is mostly environmental (my mother is borderline).
    I instinctively trust the psychiatrists’ points of view more than hers on this matter.
    This said, I’m currently on therapy with a therapist and psychiatrist together and it is working perfectly for me.

    • @ariannamolinari1473
      @ariannamolinari1473 Před 4 lety +11

      Alessandro Ricciardi Also I don't understand why they don't speak about the Lithium as the most common mood stabilizer for bipolar disorder, instead of generic antipsychotics or antidepressants. I've been diagnosed as bipolar type one this year, after 8 years in therapy with 3 different psychotherapists that weren't prepared at all! One of them also told me ”bipolar disorder doesn't exist”... Like it was Trump with climate change. The lack of knowledge in this environment is crazy and sad.

    • @TT-fn1xb
      @TT-fn1xb Před 4 lety +4

      @@ariannamolinari1473 I would have thought it didn't exist too, until I started to experience inexplicable highs. Experience makes you a believer. I hope you get the help you need.

    • @karencarney7595
      @karencarney7595 Před 4 lety +9

      Ur very on-point. Detailed. The best psychiatrists/therapists/psychotherapists, are one ones that have either experienced it personally/have been significantly affected by it. Books may educate, but experience dictates the outcome of the patient ultimately, I feel.

    • @alwayssunny8884
      @alwayssunny8884 Před 4 lety

      If your mother is borderline you could have it as well. It tends to run in the family.

    • @dianekimball6812
      @dianekimball6812 Před 4 lety +2

      @@ariannamolinari1473 I feel your pain. I once had a nurse practitioner tell me that hypomania," wasn't humanly possible".

  • @laurabirli
    @laurabirli Před 3 lety +1

    God bless all of the souls who have suffered and are suffering. I've been there and my heart is with you 😚❤️

  • @maxludlow6629
    @maxludlow6629 Před 4 lety +2

    Bless all three. Beautiful people in their own right

  • @rivb9466
    @rivb9466 Před 4 lety +3

    I can feel the pain. you know, there's nothing physical that shows but it's mentally painful to spiral so rapidly. And I only have depression. Imagine having manic episodes one minute then you crash the next.

  • @chrisschneider7505
    @chrisschneider7505 Před 4 lety +25

    I attend a therapy group and I feel the diagnosis of bipolar is over diagnosed and psychiatrists are too quick to numb emotions. For example, drug and alcohol patients are often misdiagnosed. I think that there has to be a a satisfactory period of abstinence before diagnosing mental illness in this instance.

    • @girlinterrupted9145
      @girlinterrupted9145 Před 4 lety +2

      Chris Schneider There’s supposed to be, APA requires counselors to refer any client to drug and alcohol treatment if they are showing signs of struggling with addiction.

    • @Martyfartini
      @Martyfartini Před 2 lety +1

      Like Paul, who got manic when he smoked “legal highs”
      Who could predict that would happen?
      Surely there is a difference between drug induced mania and naturally occurring symptoms.

  • @QueenAmethyst55
    @QueenAmethyst55 Před 3 lety +1

    I'm no stranger to feeling depressed but my God does my heart go out to these poor people. What a nightmare & torment for them. I really felt for Ashley. So terribly sad to have your life blighted by these mental health conditions. 😔
    Paul's mother. ❤️

  • @morganl4445
    @morganl4445 Před 4 lety +2

    It's so intriguing to hear these people basically go through what sounds like drug induced highs and lows, but it's just their brains. I feel for them deeply but damn is it a fascinating phenomenon.

  • @tiffanycayce8701
    @tiffanycayce8701 Před 3 lety +3

    I suffer from PTSD depression anxiety BPD and insomnia as have since around 7 or 8 years old. I've come a long way with my mental health and can honestly say I'm in a good place now and am living a happy life. I know for a fact my diagnoses are due to severe abuse and childhood trauma. I suffered a lot throughout life but i couldn't imagine having to go trough what that man does who goes from mania to depression within seconds that must be so hard to deal with.

    • @siddharthrajan24
      @siddharthrajan24 Před 2 lety

      You are awesome.... You handle so well, i am just struggling

  • @rachaelburt1737
    @rachaelburt1737 Před 4 lety +9

    Broke my heart when Paul said “mental institutions or jail cells”. I hope he has normal episodes if that’s what it calls, I’m just going by my uncles experience and I’d honestly say most of the time he’s manic, rarely depressed and will have “normal” periods but even then I couldn’t say they are really “normal”. In no way do I mean that in an offence way! Paul is clearly wonderful in his own way and tbh from what I see 7:21in seems relatively happy in his own world!

  • @lynnmarieanderson1744
    @lynnmarieanderson1744 Před 10 měsíci +1

    I have these issues and I feel like I’m ignored by my family and shunned by a lot of people. I was bullied in school constantly. You can just feel like you want to lash out at a world that doesn’t understand you and doesn’t want to.

  • @Soderberget
    @Soderberget Před 3 lety +1

    I got diagnosed with borderline and it's a living hell with all fast highs n lows. For me it was a mix between genetics, trauma and neglection as a child that caused this... I wish nobody had to suffer like this

  • @tarpleyk9352
    @tarpleyk9352 Před 4 lety +19

    I hate taking medication, when having someone to talk to , does tremendous delight for me. Otherwise, the weight is heavy to bare, alone.

  • @CandyMClark-iy9hz
    @CandyMClark-iy9hz Před 4 lety +33

    My heart goes out to all the mentall illness people. Its heart breaking I cant imagine having this problem and along having to live wow alot of responsiblity sad...

  • @enlightenmentbarbie
    @enlightenmentbarbie Před 4 lety

    This last bit was spot on, when she’s talking to Paul about the all or nothing thinking... I too was an only child, driven towards perfection in school by my strict parents, then I adopted that perfectionism as my own so I became the perfection police, then I decided to become a star athlete, worked hard to become a brilliant artist, and I emotionally can’t stand being just ok at something- I can’t face it. Just that alone would be difficult but added to it is my emotions and the weird abnormal ways my brain operates even outside of this perfectionism, it’s just wacky. So it’s more than just that but I have no idea how to describe it.

  • @rscottenglish
    @rscottenglish Před 4 lety

    A very good conclusion that she's come to. We are all unique individuals who have been shaped by unique circumstances. I believe the world will be a better place for us humans if we develop a greater capacity for empathy, forgiveness, and compassion for one another.

  • @earlofcumbrae-Ground_Zero
    @earlofcumbrae-Ground_Zero Před 4 lety +20

    Interesting documentary...worth a watch. Thanks for the upload.

  • @noheapai4145
    @noheapai4145 Před 4 lety +4

    I’m amazed that when treating mental illness there’s no looking at the brain more closely to s figure out what’s happening within
    each individual.

    • @amandaseymour9200
      @amandaseymour9200 Před 3 lety

      Yess!! All it takes is a scan and it could explain so much!

    • @MargaretBelle
      @MargaretBelle Před 3 lety

      i think it might have a lot to do with us not knowing enough about the brain when it comes to mental health

  • @fredfletcher9966
    @fredfletcher9966 Před 3 lety +2

    I really enjoyed this. I actually agree. I studied psychology for 3 years and I am not an expert, but I have had 5 children and that is worth a lot more than a degree when working out what makes different people happy or stable or some of the reasons why they become so depressed. I think she's right. Putting everyone in the same box is ludicrous. We are all different and things in our lives that happen will change our brains along with genetics and hormones and a person's DNA makeup. I believe everyone has a unique experience when suffering mental illness

  • @saintsinner7565
    @saintsinner7565 Před 4 lety +1

    Paul is such a colorful character, I hope he manages to live in that life full of those ups and downs

  • @kylew.4896
    @kylew.4896 Před 3 lety +9

    Ugh I know that feeling...being so embarrassed about you manic episodes after people have to tell you what you did...I'm glad I got treatment and try to help those who seek it

    • @rutchijoydayanan2067
      @rutchijoydayanan2067 Před 2 lety +1

      Same here. Like Everytime i remember it i told myself "why did i do that? 🤦‍♀️".

  • @01katiecakes01
    @01katiecakes01 Před 4 lety +4

    I have NEVER encountered so many ADS in one video! Insane! Don't waste your time.

  • @SofiaoJerry
    @SofiaoJerry Před 4 lety

    Her conclusion at the end is GOLD

  • @Carlsfm1
    @Carlsfm1 Před 4 lety +2

    Paul's mum is such a sweetheart.

  • @Neontrifle
    @Neontrifle Před 4 lety +138

    Man! Talk about trying go get patient to fit your hypothesis...............A therapist only sees social circumstances effecting the patient, a psychiatrist see brain dysfunction, a cop sees bad behaviour...........If the only tool you have is a hammer, you tend to treat everything as if it were a nail.

    • @mlawren7
      @mlawren7 Před 4 lety +1

      I got really lucky in that I have a psychiatrist who practices psychotherapy. He actually recommended (but not insisted) that I go off medication, and then later he prescribed me Prozac, but this was my suggestion.

    • @Spore5006
      @Spore5006 Před 4 lety

      I see what you are saying , like a carpenter seeing only nails. However, I think it's common that people who go into these fields have personal experience with this and a sort of co-dependency treatment that works in their eyes is how they decide to angle it. Whether or not their critical thinking and training can get to a more proper scientific method is generally the hard part. Especially since a lot of diseases of the mind also need heavily, a spiritual, philosophical, and bonding component. I think its not the lady so much as the editing that made her look bad. She set out to make a question about if its this or that, they just made it look like she was pushing for one. Maybe she was just trying to exhaust the idea and leave you to decide. And As all of us can see, its a combination of chemicals, environment and genetics. Therefor, its best to use drugs, therapies, and keep advancing research.

    • @donnaholman4538
      @donnaholman4538 Před 4 lety +2

      Paul G yes cops do see us as crazy

  • @detroitfettyghost8492
    @detroitfettyghost8492 Před 4 lety +160

    This is a travesty of a psych therapist .... she is trying to get round pegs into square holes etc,. She's very confused.

    • @flumpaustin1994
      @flumpaustin1994 Před 4 lety +7

      She needs therapy.

    • @detroitfettyghost8492
      @detroitfettyghost8492 Před 4 lety +4

      @@flumpaustin1994 Yes very much lol! A good acid trip might re-sprout her wings!

    • @ysabellpp
      @ysabellpp Před 3 lety

      She is trying to help, what do you do to help others ?

    • @tabazail
      @tabazail Před 3 lety +7

      💯 This "psychotherapist" is useless. How does she not know what medication does and why is she dead set on the idea that its environmental rather than physiological..... And why the F*** does she look like that!?🔲🔳

    • @orangesurfer563
      @orangesurfer563 Před 3 lety +3

      @@tabazail dude same thing ,I was excited to watch but after she said she doesn't know how medications works it threw me off .

  • @sven888
    @sven888 Před 4 lety

    Human beings desire nothing else but to love and be loved. It's very simple. Love one another! Be kind to each other, hold each other, comfort each other. Thank you.

  • @monikapastor1958
    @monikapastor1958 Před 3 lety

    Psychotherapist Philippa Perry asked very good questions right to the point. Thank you for sharing, very informative.

  • @musicfeedsyoursoul8070
    @musicfeedsyoursoul8070 Před 4 lety +518

    Edna Mode was sooo freaking biased. Stop insisting its trauma, lady!

    • @courtneymeadows2416
      @courtneymeadows2416 Před 4 lety +12

      MusicFeedsYourSoul right like girl chill

    • @therion5458
      @therion5458 Před 4 lety +59

      There are many people like this who are in denial about basic reality/genetics. Everything is a "social construct" to them.
      The idea that all these people got a condition as complex as bipolar disorder simply from "trauma," is idiotic.

    • @karencarney7595
      @karencarney7595 Před 4 lety +7

      True. (Sorry I have nothing witty, clever or intelligent, to add). But totally agree.

    • @tiffanyroseangeles7517
      @tiffanyroseangeles7517 Před 4 lety

      MusicFeedsYourSoul that's what they were taught ms

    • @MountainGirl7771
      @MountainGirl7771 Před 4 lety

      Not Edna Mode, she is more like Roz from Monsters Inc.

  • @LilBabyGTripper
    @LilBabyGTripper Před 4 lety +36

    I was diagnosed with bipolar and it was wrong! Ten year I suffered with the wrong medication when I actually am autistic and ADHD. It was proven when I started on Ritalin and an antidepressant without a mood stabiliser and had no mood swings. Took 10 years to revoke the diagnosis.

    • @LilBabyGTripper
      @LilBabyGTripper Před 4 lety +4

      Danielle Burke you couldn’t be more right! They say 80% of girls on the spectrum are misdiagnosed with BPD or bipolar. It’s so sad 😞
      It sounds like your time line is almost the same as mine. I got my ADHD first and fight so hard for my ASD diagnosis.

    • @thatdamnbucket9847
      @thatdamnbucket9847 Před 4 lety +2

      It was different for me. I was orginal diagnosed with ADHD and OCD. I had this diagnosis until I was an adult then I was correctly diagnosed with autism.

    • @LilBabyGTripper
      @LilBabyGTripper Před 4 lety +1

      The Borderline Life, that was the same for me, but I did my own investigation and found a psychologist that didn’t need a GP referral and with my mums clateral I got my letter to put it on my GPs desk and that was that I got my diagnosis changed and my meds proved me right. I can’t be bipolar if I can have a stimulant (Ritalin) and SSRI ( aropax) without a mood stabiliser and not have a mood swing. Medication can really speak for itself sometimes.

    • @nightbot9159
      @nightbot9159 Před 4 lety

      Exactly what I think I have.

    • @farooh20
      @farooh20 Před 4 lety +2

      Check out PANDAS syndrome.. your manias and so called autism/bipolarism is all caused by a viral attack bacterial or parasitic lyme disease.. treat the cause ... vaccines are causes to illnesses that develop either at birth or shown later on in life. Being put on anti psychotic drugs won't fix anything. Trying an anti viral or anti bacterial instead . And put on long term too. Or IVIG .. please contact a PANDAS/PANS DOCTOR

  • @carolsheppard6649
    @carolsheppard6649 Před 3 lety +1

    My heart goes out to people suffering with this illness 😢

  • @sofiatsanidou3715
    @sofiatsanidou3715 Před 4 lety +2

    Wow, i didn t expect to see that so many of you think that this hypothesis is wrong.. I really found it very interesting

  • @crystleculling2998
    @crystleculling2998 Před 6 lety +120

    Watching this on July 18th. Waiting for Yar to take over the world.

  • @dianebays5484
    @dianebays5484 Před 4 lety +5

    I can't even begin to understand the mood swings. Going from a great, talkative mood, to thinking the world is out to get you. I'm seeing it, first hand, and there is no reasoning.

  • @oldandtiredshouldberetired3436

    It's important to do sleep studies on all people diagnosed with bipolar disorder. Many may not be true Bipolar but the manic episodes may in fact be related to a lack of REM stag sleep, where they get hours of sleep but no REM stage.

    • @MargaretBelle
      @MargaretBelle Před 3 lety +1

      unfortunately at least in the UK being manic once gets you labelled as bipolar. mania is intrinsically linked to being bipolar.

  • @mamaluca1958
    @mamaluca1958 Před 4 lety +6

    I was bullied from grade 1 to grade 11, l couldnt finish high school cause l couldnt take the bully anymore. I was ready to commit suicide. And l lived in a little town everyone knows everyone. At 18 yrs old l got the strength to move far, far away and start a new life. Ive never gone back home to live just visit family on holidays. It was the best thing l did. Being depressed is so hard. You feel alone, cant do anything right, you feel like you fail everything. .. so glad to see the people here are doing ok with help.🙏🙏🤗

  • @belindahope6725
    @belindahope6725 Před 3 lety +6

    I can be having the happiest day the drastically all of a sudden i feel like im the worst person ever and sucidal feeling. It switches drastically sometimes

  • @cindyjune6490
    @cindyjune6490 Před 4 lety +6

    Bipolar runs in my family , but it was triggered by so much trauma in my life I was not diagnosed until I was 53.

    • @lulumargaret
      @lulumargaret Před 4 lety +1

      Cindy June Me also. I was 52. Late onset diagnosis but I felt unhinged before diagnosis from culminations in psych trauma. Trigger one was due to a family separation that broke my heart. 3 psychiatrists said I have bipolar type 2. Been high functioning though. Working. Sometimes I do stupid things and have anxiety all the time.

  • @kaylee8869
    @kaylee8869 Před 3 lety +1

    Paul. I understand you. I feel your sadness and your beautiful madness. I also cycle through the day. I have a very loving boyfriend and is thankful for him and loving me through it.

  • @diane9247
    @diane9247 Před 3 lety +2

    What Paul said near the end is so useful for bipolar people! He had a therapist who told him "I spend half my time telling people that it's OK to be average." My bipolar clients would lament that they missed the highs because they were so euphoric. I heard from chronically I depressed people that their goal was to just be happy. I would tell them both that most people they see walking around are feeling mostly neutral, with a few contented times during the day or week. Most of us don't walk around thinking, "Wow, I'm so happy!" That humorous reality-check them a chuckle.

    • @outofthisworld8245
      @outofthisworld8245 Před 3 lety

      How do i know if im bipolar

    • @OlimpiaOlimpia
      @OlimpiaOlimpia Před 8 měsíci +1

      Wait this makes so much sense now that I'm finally on medication. Average feels strange, like... is this what true euthimia feels like? Is this how normal people feel? I wake up just fine now, I might get tired after a day of working, but I'm not melancholic or in total despair ot sleeping 15 hours for days. On the other side I feel like I have energy, but not all the rapid thinking and everything looking in bright colors. Like... this is average. And it's a little strange. And it's okay.

  • @TheHayley555
    @TheHayley555 Před 4 lety +14

    I found this really insightful and thought provoking.

  • @mishycrawford
    @mishycrawford Před 4 lety +4

    Hope all my fellow bipolars are taking it one day at a time , sure know I am
    It ain't easy I'll tell ya ,I'm 17 and recently been diagnosed after a suicide attempt was misdiagnosed with major depressive disorder but after my hospital trip it was official that my ups and downs weren't just the normal moody teenager "phase" makes sense when for a few weeks you feel like your on speed and then your suicidal

  • @c.s.7266
    @c.s.7266 Před 3 lety +1

    I've Complicated PTSD and Clinical Depression and I'm going to be going to drug and alcohol treatment in a couple weeks. It's super hard to control the symptoms because I have so many "triggers'. I told my therapist that I would rather be a stumbling drunk and an addict than have mental illness. You're never at peace. If you don't have insurance here then you may end up homeless and on the street. It's so debilitating to your soul. I hope for better days.

  • @CocoapieRodriguez
    @CocoapieRodriguez Před 4 lety +6

    My neighbor would play her music from 7,9 PM to 6 am in the morning, over 10HOURS of straight bass.
    Imagine suffering through that.

  • @whipchick90
    @whipchick90 Před 4 lety +74

    My ex-husband's bi-polar just appeared in his late 30's. He took his own life when he was 41. Very sad.

    • @toucan4207
      @toucan4207 Před 4 lety +8

      I’m sorry to hear that. That’s really awful 😥

    • @caracalcontinuum3118
      @caracalcontinuum3118 Před 4 lety +3

      Sorry for your loss. My grandma was bi-polar and has tried taking her own life.

    • @MrRecklessryan
      @MrRecklessryan Před 4 lety +3

      Sorry for your loss, that is very late for a male. My mother is Schizoaffective. A one in ten chance of inheriting this illness scares the shit out of me.

    • @blessedplace9257
      @blessedplace9257 Před 4 lety +7

      I'm so sorry. My best friend just took her own life two nights ago. She suffered her whole young life. She was only 22

    • @sylwia7060
      @sylwia7060 Před 4 lety +5

      This is awful,I lost my boyfriend 17 years ago- it still hurts,I do sometime Even talk to him,he is allways with me in a good way,it Will get better🌹 sending You lots of love and Light♥💜💙💚💛 I' m a girl 38y , Greetings from faraway Norway 🤗🌌✨

  • @claremcgraw9048
    @claremcgraw9048 Před 3 lety +3

    I feel really terrible for Ashley, those kinds of extreme mood swings alone can be lethal.

  • @asiadread4902
    @asiadread4902 Před 4 lety +179

    Oh my goodness...I really hope Ashley got new meds! You don’t give Prozac to people with bipolar disorder

    • @TheKatarinaGiselle
      @TheKatarinaGiselle Před 4 lety +17

      Asia Dread that many times a day too is absolutely awful. He is NOT on the right medication. He seems sensitive and like certain thoughts trigger his rapid changes, talking about the medication really seemed to trigger his depressive state, I feel so bad for him and the symptoms the has to endure each day.

    • @marwahalsabbagh4104
      @marwahalsabbagh4104 Před 4 lety +12

      I agree, I've been diagnosed with borderline and bipolar they gave me prozac at first and it drived me crazy

    • @jessicascearcy2511
      @jessicascearcy2511 Před 4 lety +23

      Prozac is always the first go to. Sadly it has never worked for me. It makes the downs last longer. This is an invisible illness. "Oh but you look ok" my bi-polar disorder started when I was 9 with great manic episodes where I'd be awake for days. I couldn't sleep. Then the lows I could sleep 17 hours at a crack. When I was 14 I was given Prozac for the first time. I tried to commit suicide with a month of being on it. This illness is horrible and sometimes the worst place to be is inside your own head.

    • @csvtvChrist
      @csvtvChrist Před 4 lety +5

      I was on Prozac for 8 years for my bipolar. Originally, I was diagnosed with Major Depressive. But because of how I can get super delusional and high coupled with family history, almost a factory of bipolar, I have it. I just recently got on Trintellix and it didn't work out it made me sick for far too long and I would vomit every time I took it. I am someone that needs an antidepressant with my bipolar. Recently, my lows have come back and they've been very bad. So bad I can't move. I lay in bed until it subsides and do what I can in that amount of time. I dropped out of college because of it. I was suicidal and they didn't want me or anyone else getting hurt.

    • @saal3387
      @saal3387 Před 4 lety +2

      Asia Dread i’m on prozac and i just feel nothing I dont know when am I going to take the right medications

  • @edieskyla8775
    @edieskyla8775 Před 4 lety +5

    My mum has bipolar she had been depressed prior to her first mania many times however she went manic for the first time at 40. A few years prior my dad had bashed her head in she was put on a medication called dexanphetamine to get her brain function back to normal after the brain damage . Shes always be overly intelligent and had lows but her bipolar was brought on my trauma both physical and mental. Shes now 52 and is doing really well two years since her last mania lithium saved her. But make no mistake medical health professionals have not always been overly helpful if someone in your family is suffering get help from many professionals not just one

  • @kathleenlycan3258
    @kathleenlycan3258 Před 4 lety +22

    I’m bipolar and I was diagnosed later in life my early life was full of trauma. I know this disease can’t be cured but it can be controlled. I am taking medication and I am stable. I don’t just take medication I also see a doctor and a therapist.

    • @prettymommy6579
      @prettymommy6579 Před 4 lety +3

      You are doing the right things my friend! Keep it up. Recognizing the problem and getting help can lead to living a normal happy life!

    • @fine08ifeanyi95
      @fine08ifeanyi95 Před 4 lety +1

      I think trauma is a leading factor to this.

  • @calamitynatalie8590
    @calamitynatalie8590 Před 4 lety +14

    This really seems like yet another battle of psychotherapists vs psychiatrists...instead of working together...

  • @samanthahardy9903
    @samanthahardy9903 Před 3 lety +1

    I was diagnosed with Bipolar Disorder about 7 years ago and when I asked my psychiatrist if it was Bipolar 1 or Bipolar 2. She said, "Just Bipolar. There is no one or two!" I still haven't been put into a category to this day.

  • @zettemueller4540
    @zettemueller4540 Před 3 lety

    After bashing the dr w the two tone hair throughout the video for her unswerving concentration on trauma or experience causing the manic and low episodes, I found that her closing statement about the “bipolar ness” of each of the patients being so different was very important . Her statement about after being given the diagnosis of being bipolar, it seems like it’s the end or it shuts off the talking about how to handle it , what mechanisms can they use to work w their diagnosis,etc. THAT IS A VERY IMPORTANT STATEMENT, and I believe that is an excellent point to keep in mind!!

  • @sharono1636
    @sharono1636 Před 4 lety +110

    The guy with the drums is on Prozac?? you don't give SSRI anti depressants to someone with bipolar - it can make mania worse. Diazepam is also a poor choice - it's a benzo and shouldn't be given as a long term treatment because it's so addictive. Mood stabilizers like Depakote or lithim are a better choice

    • @FeralKimchi
      @FeralKimchi Před 4 lety +6

      I wondered the same thing about the Prozac.

    • @lenstar4
      @lenstar4 Před 4 lety +12

      Bad combo of drugs. Hope he gets help with this, that was hard to watch.

    • @benhogg5488
      @benhogg5488 Před 4 lety +11

      This is what happened to me, I have bipolar and was misdiagnosed Initially with depression and was on sertraline, it was horrible

    • @hollyvipond168
      @hollyvipond168 Před 4 lety +2

      I was diagnosed with cyclothymia 2 years ago now and I can honestly say that fluoxetine has saved my life..

    • @jezza10181
      @jezza10181 Před 4 lety

      Yeah, I was thinking that too

  • @christylinck4493
    @christylinck4493 Před 4 lety +376

    "When he has that manic thing.." LOL where did they find this goofball doctor? 🙄

    • @forestrot666
      @forestrot666 Před 4 lety +27

      She reminds me of a therapist I walked out on 4 sessions in. I tried giving her the benefit of the doubt but everytime I wanted to throw the stupid plug in waterfall at the wall.

    • @GalacticEgg
      @GalacticEgg Před 4 lety +17

      Right? She kept on with getting him to talk about "trauma," like that isn't really how BP1 works lady

    • @tonyrox5
      @tonyrox5 Před 4 lety +5

      the trash with that skunk hair style...

    • @eimaj3185
      @eimaj3185 Před 3 lety +4

      tonyrox5 someone with bipolar doesn’t always have trauma...why can’t people understand that!!

    • @jordanwise3523
      @jordanwise3523 Před 3 lety

      Frfr

  • @ZimZCade2023
    @ZimZCade2023 Před 3 lety

    I have type 2 bipolar, and I really empathize for these individuals. It is not out of the false sort of pity stigma gives, but because I can only imagine having some of their symptoms. They are very strong individuals who are doing the best they can. I was taken aback by the psychotherapist’s reaction and behaviors towards them, it almost felt like she was judging them in a sense. I do not think these people are strange or dangerous, I think they are struggling with an extreme mood disorder like myself and deserve respect and help.

  • @ron95754
    @ron95754 Před 4 lety

    Self exploration...is the absolute key to every single diagnosis of illness. And that is the absolute truth. It's about discovering the method of Self Exploration which becomes the walk.

  • @annekeolivier7157
    @annekeolivier7157 Před 4 lety +70

    Trying to draw conclusions about a disorder using 3 people with different underlying problems (dementia, chilhood neglect, autism) is really not very scientific. And concluding that both genetic and enviromental factors are involved... really not a very original idea.

  • @poptart6662012
    @poptart6662012 Před 4 lety +47

    man, when im manic i am so on top of the world. i can see around corners. I can fly.

    • @enterbalak
      @enterbalak Před 4 lety +5

      Best feeling hey

    • @karencarney7595
      @karencarney7595 Před 4 lety +9

      That's a sign of high energy and intelligence. Use it to ur advantage, NOT ur detriment.

    • @microbios8586
      @microbios8586 Před 4 lety +6

      Yeah. I get it. I've done some crazy things in retrospect. 😨 I can't believe I had the self-confidence.
      I used to dumpster dive for hours on end in the middle of the night..hardly sleep...go to work...repeat every day. Kinda funny

    • @aniamunoz1959
      @aniamunoz1959 Před 4 lety +2

      I can run Google, Facebook, amazon and do a better Job than trump
      ! I am fast cycling, going from lows to highs my family are amazing they allow me my bipolar they love me as I am. I have been taken aside at work "are you having a high?" no I'm just happy today, also asked at work to stand up at a team meeting and explain my BP okay then at the next meeting let's discuss your haemorrhoids???? That'll be fun? Much more interesting than my BP? 😊 That was asked of me 2 years ago, mental health has not come far has it, we talk about it, we have leaflets to read and people nod and are empathetic, living with it is different for everyone, there is no such think as BP 1 and 2, there is BP and it is very individual. This is a disgrace to give this air time,i am 5 minutes into this and it upsets me so much, for an educated person as she pertains to be, she has no clue, with no research at all. She should stick to what she knows, or maybe she needs to go back and learn more.i don't explain me as I'm me, and bipolar is part of me, it doesn't define the person I am, however it's me and take me or leave me as I'm happy, and the highs are amazing. I get so much accomplished, I run a business helping others. I love my life its precious, I don't want to be here either, it's a battle a serious battle, will I win the battle in my head? Documentaries like this, like must things in life should be lead by the people that have a connection to the condition, situation, issue, that's only my thoughts on this. I feel like I'm watching a Britain's got BP, making a mockery of these lovely 3 people living their extraordinary lives. Instead of spending money on this program, give it to the people researching mental health.

    • @Jo-ph9zo
      @Jo-ph9zo Před 4 lety +2

      @@microbios8586 did you find any cool stuff?

  • @deerfish3000
    @deerfish3000 Před 4 lety +2

    Stressful environmental/situational factors can definitely trigger the symptoms of someone with a mental illness sooner but not cause them. If you've got it, you've got it... it will eventually rear its ugly head, but stress definitely contributes to when. That's why, I believe, a lot of people become aware of their mental illness when they are in their late teens, early 20s. It's the first time on their own, they have their whole lives ahead of them. Trying to make ends meet, what are they going to do with their lives? Will they find a partner? Where will they live? etc. A very insecure, mysterious and stressful time in a person's life.

  • @zettemueller4540
    @zettemueller4540 Před 3 lety

    Ashley reminds me of my Niece who has aspbergers. May God be with you Ashley, and HELP you.