haiku “relentless”
haiku by jennifer kiley
©transgraphics by j. kiley
01.12.13
Challenge Haiku &/or Piku—Haiku-day #1
Next Time Day #2 Piku
Tag Archives: suicidal
I Look To You
I Look To You
Lyrics & Song Created by R.Kelly
Sung by Whitney Houston
Post Created by Jennifer Kiley
©transgraphics by j. kiley
Posted 01.09.13
I Look To You
R Kelly
Whitney Houston
Her Version
As I lay me down
Heaven hear me now
I’m lost without a cause
After giving it my all
Winter storms have come
And darkened my sun
After all that I’ve been through
Who on earth can I turn to?
I look to you
I look to you
After all my strength is gone
In you I can be strong
I look to you
I look to you
And when melodies are gone
In you I hear a song,
I look to you
About to lose my breath
There’s no more fighting left
Sinking to rise no more
Searching for that open door
And every road that I’ve taken
Led to my regret
And I don’t know if I’m gonna make it
Nothing to do but lift my head
I look to you
I look to you
And when all my strength is gone
In you I can be strong
I look to you
I look to you
And when melodies are gone
In you I hear a song,
I look to you
My levee’s have broken,
my walls have come
Crumbling down on me
The rain is falling,
defeat is calling
I need you to set me free
Take me far away from the battle
I need you, shine on me
I look to you
I look to you
After all my strength has gone
In you I can be strong
I look to you
I look to you
And when melodies are gone
In you I hear a song,
I look to you
I look to you
I look to you
Guiding Me Through Life #30
Guiding Me Through Life
By Jennifer Kiley
Trans-Graphics by j.kiley
11.29.12 #30
November Month of the Verses 30 days 30 verses #30-the last verse
December Month of the Haiku 31 days 31 haiku #1 starts 12.01.12
first was titled: “sunrise” haiku-tibetan flute music (posted early)
new first one will be created on eve of dec. 1st-2012

le chemin de la vie est doré et rempli avec l’imagination by j. kiley
11.29.12 #30
guiding me through life
by jennifer kiley
guiding me through life
my conscience comes first
to my mind
living a life
with good principles
raised in a congregational church
belonging to the youth
and senior choir
being part of the youth fellowship
going to church school
twice a week
one being on Sunday
after the children’s church service
the other is
walking over from grammar school
during the week
what did i learn
the man who killed Jesus
flew airplanes
or so i thought
i daydreamed a lot
his name was Pilate
which sounded like pilot
never noticed the spelling
so i thought
a pilot killed Jesus
why he would want to do such a thing
was absurd
i thought
not necessarily
in those exact words
i imagined things
heard half of what the boring people
were babbling
i use to see a light surrounding the minister
during the sermon
when i looked away
he was every place
my eyes would wander
the sermons were so long
i don’t think one
made any sense
i was there for the choir
it was the music i loved
the candles too
once during communion
i actually went into a meditative trance
I was jolted back from a state of bliss
when someone touched me
to take the small silver cup
which once held the fake blood of Christ
which wasn’t even wine
but instead was grape juice
plus the bread
which was supposed to be
the symbolic body of Christ
it was my only sustenance
until lunch/ breakfast after church
this was the start
but brought eventually
a disillusionment
that broke my belief
in the church forever
the person i most respected
turned out to be a bigot
i wandered through life
discovered my own belief system
a living breathing changing entity
that lives within me
around me
and through me
i am an honest person
a real and true person
kind and who i am
trusting when possible
truthful a necessity
i am learning
to understand
who i am
i have rage
that i am trying
to get beyond
it is covering up
a volcano i cover
holding back emotions
that would overwhelm me
into a state of pure divine madness
if it were released
too soon
or all at once
many horrific things
happened to me
in my life
a great deal
when i was a child
the rest
throughout
my life
i’ve lost
many people to death
most too young
suddenly unexpected
at present
my therapist
expressed to me
recently
i am
an emotional
mess
i’m holding on
by a thin thread
of hope and reality
creativity
and a great deal
of imagination…
© Jennifer Kiley 2012
pure imagination-gene wilder
“willy wonka and the chocolate factory
light guides the way
light guides the way
haiku by jennifer kiley
trans-graphics by j. kiley
dedicated to friendship
11.18.12
Personal Perspective on Feeling Suicidal
Personal Perspective on Feeling Suicidal
by Jennifer Kiley
10.12.12
When you are bipolar, suicide takes on a different dimension. It comes with the low of bipolar with depression often accompanied with feeling suicidal. Death doesn’t feel scary at all to me and being drawn to a method to commit suicide goes through your mind.
I am conscious of what I am feeling and struggle with the urges which are strong. When I am able to come to a reasonable place where I think of my animals and the people in my life that I would hurt it helps pull me back to a more lucid place but the suicidal feelings don’t subsist.
I turn to writing. It enables me to express the emotions and thoughts that are happening inside of me. Eventually, I am able to write myself into a calmer place and often bring myself to a level plain where I can relax and allow myself to get sleep. But it is extremely powerful, when you are in the midst of feeling suicidal.
Something new has been happening. I am beginning to sense when I am being triggered or when I am heading for a suicidal fall. Certain physical sensations spread through my body. It is much more physical than mental. I have spent a great deal of time in therapy trying to discover this about myself. It is important to discover the triggers that set off the suicidal ideation but it is also important with bipolar to identify what sets off the hypomanic or manic phases before they are set off.
The next phase is to figure out whether I would be able to prevent or to weaken the effect of the extreme lows or extreme highs. Both can be as harmful to me or anyone with bipolar.
The delusions are what I am also trying to understand now. I have come to a place where I can step outside of a delusional state and logically observe what I see as the delusion and know what it is and see what is real and what is not. This is all an advance for me that I have accomplished. It doesn’t prevent any of these states to take place. I still get suicidal when depressed but actual times when I get depressed may last longer but they are not always filled with thoughts of suicidal ideations.
The high states, I still have a problem with getting sleep when I am feeling hypomanic. And the delusional thoughts filled with paranoia, doubt and confusion are becoming more able to understand. It doesn’t necessarily stop me from feeling the mixed confusion but if I fight it and talk it out with my s/o I am able to get a clearer fix on what is the false truth and what is the true reality.
This is great progress for me. I feel I need to thank my writing and my friends and significant other for their help in guiding me through these difficult states to bring me to a better understanding of what is really going on.
Right now I am not sure how much credit I want to give to my present therapist feeling the way I do. I wrote those feelings down in a poem that I posted yesterday. I have a lot of thinking to do to figure out what I need to do next.
I do need a therapist but I need one I can trust and who is on my side and also who is able to help me and understands my conditions better than I do so that they will be able to help me toward getting better or at least in improving my understanding of what is going on in my mind. Also, to help me express my feelings more openly and freely and for me to not be afraid or ashamed of what I feel or think.
There is a lot more work to be done and I need to work with someone I can trust and is not going to do something so outrageously cruel as my therapist just did to me this past week. Lots of thought needs to go into what I will do next.
“Suicide is a form of murder-premeditated murder. It isn’t something you do the first time you think of doing it. It takes getting used to. And you need the means, the opportunity, the motive. A successful suicide demands good organisation and a cool head, both of which are usually incompatible with the suicidal state of mind.” ~ Susanna Kaysen ~ Girl, Interrupted
…J.K. the secret keeper
Jack & Bobby-Lost Boys
Worldwide nearly a million people commit suicide every year. More than those murdered or killed in war. Think before you say something hurtful to someone else. It may look like they’re ok but they’re not. Words are more powerful than you think. OCTOBER IS ANTI-BULLYING MONTH. STOP BULLYING. BEING BULLIED CAN LEAD TO SUICIDE.
The Myths of Suicide
The Myths of Suicide
By Thomas Joiner, PhD
January 19, 2011
Completely Revised by The Secret Keeper on 10.12.12
OCTOBER IS ANTI-BULLYING MONTH. STOP BULLYING. BEING BULLIED CAN LEAD TO SUICIDE.
Myths about suicide abound in the therapeutic setting. Why People Die by Suicide involves a fight against ancient, ingrained, and powerful self-preservation instincts. In Myths About Suicide, I contend that death by suicide is neither impulsive, cowardly, vengeful, controlling, nor selfish.
Impulsivity myths
It is a fallacy that suicide is an impulsive and momentary whim. A reporter committed suicide right on the air. She extracted a gun from beneath her desk and shot herself behind the right ear. She was rushed to a local hospital, but died 14 hours later.
The usual reaction to this tragic tale beyond shock and horror was to dwell on the seemingly impulsive nature of the act. The reporter’s behavior leading up to her suicide dispels the idea that she acted impulsively:
•She openly told her family for years that she felt depressed and suicidal
• Four years before her death, she attempted suicide by overdose and frequently discussed the incident after making these attempts.
• Weeks before she died, the news station granted her request to cover a story on suicide; and during one interview, she asked a police officer for details on self-inflicted gunshot wounds
• One week before her suicide, she told a colleague that she had bought a gun and joked with him about killing herself on the air
• On the day of her suicide, she had put the gun in a bag that she brought to the set daily. She may have done this before this day, also.
•Lastly, she had prepared news copy for a fellow reporter to read about her suicide after the fact.
The news reporter’s death illustrates that her suicide was premeditated. To consider her death impulsive leads to why the decision at that moment precisely when to pull out the gun, instead of focusing on the many factors that led up to that planned moment.
In the book An Unquiet Mind, Dr. Kay Redfield Jamison discusses her own experience with suicidal behavior and describes how it actually works: “. . . for many months I went to the 8th floor of the stairwell of the UCLA hospital and, repeatedly, only just resisted throwing myself off the ledge. . . .” Contemplating suicide is a signature of serious suicidal behavior. Jamison’s months-long thought process and behaviors counter the notion of spontaneous death by suicide.
Suicide note myths
Leaving or not leaving a suicide note. No study has reported a rate of note leaving among suicide decedents to exceed 50%. A reasonable average rate would be approximately 25%.
Why are suicide notes so rare. Suicidal persons often kill themselves before they have a chance to write a note. The relative rarity of suicide notes reveals the state of mind of those about to die by suicide. To say that persons who die by suicide are lonely at the time of their deaths is a massive understatement. Loneliness, combined with alienation, isolation, rejection, and ostracism, is a better approximation. Notes are rare because most decedents feel alienated to the point that communication through a note seems pointless or does not occur to them at all.
Diagnostic myths
Friends and family who have been surprised by a suicide and often consider it to be deeply selfish. This is understandable because the bereaved are often convinced that the decedent did not consider the impact of his or her death on those left behind. However, those who die by suicide certainly do consider the impact of their deaths on others; but to them, death is a positive rather than a negative outcome. It is the view of the person who attempts suicide.
Seasonal myths
Another common myth that death by suicide peaks around the winter holidays. Far from peaking, the winter holidays represents a low point in suicide rates, because it is a time of togetherness.
Universities offer many social, cultural, academic, athletic, and other events—many of them free of charge. There is a high level of belonging inherent in these events, Suicide rates of college students are relatively low compared with their same-aged peers not at college.
In summer activities continue but ebb considerably. A sense of belonging is lower during the summer. Suicidal ideation are higher in the summer months explained by the fluctuations in opportunities for socializing.
Slow suicide myths
A person engages in unhealthy behaviors despite knowing that these behaviors may ultimately lead to death. Genuine suicidal behavior involves a rather clear intent to die, not to do something else like smoking or taking drugs because they like it. Smoking as a slow suicide, People know smoking puts them at risk, but they smoke anyway—not because they intend to die—but because they like it. Addicts continue to use drugs even though they understand that continued use might kill them; but because they like “doing” drugs, the risks do not matter.
Therapeutic implications
In therapy, there are marked warning signs: one is talking about suicide and planning for it, clinically severe agitation, insomnia, and nightmares. A patient’s fearlessness of death, perceived to be a burden on others, and accelerating alienation increased risk.
Myths About Suicide concludes:
We need to understand that suicide is not easy, painless, cowardly, selfish, vengeful, or rash; It is not caused by “slow” methods like smoking, doing drugs, anorexia, genetic or influenced by mental disorders, Is it preventable or treatable. When we understand this we can feel compassion for those who feel suicidal or those who succeed at committing suicide.
Think Before You Say Something
This is Jade. What has happened to her? She committed suicide three days after this video was made. Jade`s video is here to spread her message. STOP THE BULLYING. IT IS ANTI-BULLYING MONTH IN OCTOBER
Teenage suicide accounts for 31,000 suicides a year in the U.S., the 3rd leading cause of death.
Worldwide nearly a million people commit suicide every year. More than those murdered or killed in war.
Think before you say something hurtful to someone else. It may look like they’re ok but they’re not. Words are more powerful than you think.
Person You Hide
Person You Hide
By The Secret Keeper
9.13.12

person you hide
Source: Uploaded by user via Jody on Pinterest
Elephant Journal Wake Up Call of Your Mind 9.11.12
joyeux anniversaire amy
par le gardien secret
9.12.12
aujourd’hui
joyeux anniversaire
amy winehouse
vous étiez
né maintenant
vous êtes
presque allé
est allé
la douleur
venir si accablant
quelques pauses
brèves
dans le
chagrin
et la douleur
mais juste
une distraction
avant d’entrer
dans l’autre
vie de vie
pour un instant
mais
la porte ferme
quelqu’un veut
qu’il a rapproché
la sécurité
secrète
disparaît
un spécial
quelqu’un leur
présence est sue
et tendant
mais
il y a
une coupure
dans la connexion
que le satellite
déclenche vous
disparaissez
ils s’assurent
que cela est
la sensation
évidente
rien tout
seul seulement
la douleur
et
l’obscurité
la proie facile
être dévoré
la mort
de besoin
de sensations
inonde
les sens pas
capable de fermer
les pensées
un jour
juste glissera
loin à l’autre
côté
qui y
va avant
de c’est le temps
est que
pourquoi
aucune lutte
l’est présumé
pour être le temps
suppose
pour aller
juste part
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Knockin’ On Heavens Door-Guns N’ Roses
Dedicated to M…She is my past but so difficult to let go of her. When she left I didn’t think anyone would make me want to trust or be alive again. There is someone. More than someone. But the lost child inside of me cannot find the satisfaction from all the loss and abandonment. The feelings slip away into a foggy memory that is lost in some other world. If not renewed it cannot be found. It is too frustrating for those who try to reach me, I can’t imagine why they don’t want to just give up. It seems as though I keep giving up and giving in to the depression that takes over my being. The suicidal feelings are getting more powerful. I thought they would diminish but the stronger the love the stronger the hold that death has on my soul. This is serious that I feel this way. Nothing seems to draw me away from the flame. I am the butterfly. I need to fly away and get carried away by the wind. Let it carry me to whereever the end of the rainbow finds a place to set down.
Happy Birthday Amy Winehouse 9.12.12
Happy Birthday Amy Winehouse
Created by The Secret Keeper
September 12, 2012
You would be 29 yrs Today

amy winehouse
Amy winehouse, you left this world on my birthday july 23, 2011. Your music entered into my life and it made me feel emotions only your songs and the way you sang them could make me feel. You led me, with your voice, through some extremely difficult times. i thank you, amy winehouse, for being so tremendousy talented and leaving the world such moving music to remember you by. You are hopefully with some really talented people who appreciate your gifts and you have the best jamming sessions. I’m thinking of you today on your birthday Sept, 12, 2012 in a special way. You are always in my heart and your music is listened to by me and millons of other fans all the time. Your soul lives on. Your music lives on. You are amongst the immortals. I’ve put together a few of my favorites to listen to and share with others. Maybe someone new will discover you that has never heard you before. Thank you for sharing your time on earth by creating such amazing music. I love you. You are loved by many. I know I will never forget you. Maybe someday we will meet. That would be so beyond cool. Say Hi to John and George and Janis and if you see River or James or Natasha, send my love to all of them. Don’t forget to say Hi to Wwhitney. Tell her we miss her. Be happy. That’s what I wish for you all. Love and Peace and Namaste. Jen ps. the secret keeper edited a poem i wrote earlier today while feeling the other side was closer then where i am now. i wonder if this is what it feels like moments before the end for most. it was suicide awareness this week. i know amy you didn’t exactly do that to yourself but you must have had some idea that you were drowning your pain. this poem is not a tribute. it is more a statement to bring awareness to what it feels like to no longer want to be here. sorry to all those who care but it is difficult to hold in this feeling of not wanting to be here any longer. it comes and it goes back away from me but the urge is strong. the bipolar takes hold of the center of your being and its your high that is great but when you’re low there is very little that can stop that feeling of where you go. this poem is a poem of letting go but what is being let go of is the question.
happy birthday amy
by the secret keeper
9.12.12
today
happy birthday
amy winehouse
you were born
now you are gone
being almost gone
the pain comes
so overwhelming
some brief pauses
in the grief and pain
but just a distraction
before entering
into the other life
living for awhile
but the door shuts
someone wants
it closed
in secret
safety
disappears
a special someone
their presence
is known
and reaching out
but there is a break
in the connection
the satellite disengages
you disappear
they make sure
that is evident
feeling nothing
all alone
only the pain
and darkness
easy prey
to be devoured
the feelings
want death
floods the senses
not able
to shut
the thoughts
down
someday
will just
slip away
to the other side
going there
before it’s time
is that why
no struggle
is it supposed
to be
time
suppose
to go
just go away
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Amy Winehouse-Love is a Losing Game
The Art of Seeing Depression
The Art of Seeing Depression
By Tom Wootton
Author of “BiPolar In Order”
James Turrell is one of the most remarkable artists alive. He has an amazing understanding of light and perception. By using darkness and almost imperceptible light, his artwork totally changes the way we see the world. I think his work with light and darkness is a perfect metaphor for trying to see depression in a new light.
When you enter one of Jim’s installations, it is so dark that you cannot see anything, or at least not much. The amount of available light is simply too little for our eyes to use. His artwork is not a picture on the wall; it is the entire environment, in which both the perception of the audience and time act as critical components.
If you stay long enough, your eyes begin to adjust to the lack of light. You start to see things that were there all along, but your eyes were not yet ready to perceive.
When you go back out into the “real” world, you bring an entirely new perspective; you begin to see everything in a whole new light (pun intended). Jim’s work can truly be described as a discovery of the act of seeing.
My own art is similar to Jim’s in many ways. Like Jim, instead of using a brush to paint a picture, I choose to build an environment that blocks out light and helps me to perceive. Unlike Jim, my art is not in the physical world; it is in my interior world.
Instead of blocking out the physical light, I learn to block out the thoughts and feelings that distract me from seeing the more subtle light that shines within each of us. I then discover deeper truths hidden within my own consciousness. When I return to the external world, I begin to see the same subtle light in the eyes of everyone I meet.
My art is called meditation. I have been practicing it for over 45 years, sometimes as much as 8 hours a day. Meditation has given me the ability to “see” things in a much deeper way. It can be described as the discovery of the act of knowing.
I recently went through a fairly deep depression, and came out thinking a lot about James Turrell. I don’t know if he is bipolar or experiences depression, but if he does, I bet he sees it in the way I do.
When I went into depression the first time, all I saw was darkness and pain. At the time, I thought it was unbearable, but looking back and comparing it to some of the far deeper hells I have since experienced, it was really nothing.
As my perception has grown, I am beginning to “see” things I never knew were there: good insights, lessons, and personal growth. In “seeing” clearly, I notice that now depression doesn’t affect me so negatively. It now affects me much more, but in a positive way, at least according to the way I have learned to “see.”
On a scale from one to five, I used to think of a five as experiencing no depression at all, and a one as so deeply depressed that I would attempt suicide. I thought four was a little painful, three even more, and two almost unbearable. Since there was no “light,” and all I could “see” was pain, I judged my experiences solely on that basis.
As I spent more time trying to “see” in depression, I began to notice many things that were probably there all along, but I could not “look” through the pain to “see” them. As I started to discover the “act of seeing” in depression, I started to ponder the significance of my discoveries.
Each time I experienced depression, it became clearer to me. I began to redefine what depression was, based on the features that I could now “see” more clearly. My scale began to change, from a scale based on pain, to one based on a much richer perception of what was going on. I still define a five as “having no symptoms,” and a one as “so difficult that I try to kill myself,” but four, three, and two have become a rich and varied landscape.
I have also come to understand the significant difference between those who have “situational depression,” caused by outward circumstances, and those who have what I consider “true depression,” caused by mental illness. I have learned to articulate that clearly enough to make a difference in the lives of both those who are truly depressed and those who love and support them.
Everyone experiences some form of depression at least once in life. If it is really bad, it means extreme sadness, crying, inability to function fully, lethargy, dullness of thought, and more. For most, it is caused by some great loss like the death of a loved one, or some other great tragedy.
You wake up in the morning so sad, you think you cannot get through the day. It might even debilitate you for a day or so, but for the most part, you get up, grab a cup of coffee, go to work, and somehow make it through the day, even if seriously diminished in your ability to perform. If it is really bad, this depression lasts for weeks or months, as you slowly get on with life. That is a three in my book. It is also about as deep as anyone gets from “situational depression,” the kind that comes solely from outside circumstances and not from mental illness.
A two is not just the same thing with more intensity. It is fundamentally different than a three. In a two, the world becomes black and white. There is no color. There is an intense physical pain. Thoughts become confused. During such pain, I lose the ability to even remember a time when it was not like this. I can see no future when it might go away. (This is called “state specific memory” and is very common.) My mind keeps repeating “kill yourself, kill yourself, kill yourself,” and I keep seeing visions of car crashes and every method of suicide that you can imagine. All I can do is hang on. A two is the worst kind of hell. (At the time of writing this, I erroneously assumed that a one meant you killed yourself from the pain of the two state.)
Being able to explain depression better and help others is great, but there is so much more. Central to my belief, is that nothing is all good or all bad, but a combination of good and bad components. We “see” the good and bad according to our ability to perceive and the filters that we place on ourselves, based on how we assign value. In my struggles with depression, I have been frustrated with my inability to “see” any good in it. In my recent depression and thoughts about James Turrell, I have begun to “see” depression in a whole new light. I am not ready to choose depression, but next time it comes, I look forward to exploring a whole new landscape.
I have noticed that aspects of depression that I used to consider a two and almost unbearable, I am now denoting as a three. I have also begun to gain tremendous insight into many things, including my spiritual life. It is from a spiritual perspective that I have really begun to see that depression can be a great thing. In my readings of the lives of saints, pain and despair is often mentioned as a catalyst that helped them to become better persons and act in a manner that is called saintly. After always struggling with this concept, I am now beginning to understand.
It was the misery of depression that brought me to the realization that I am mentally ill. The unbearable pain is what helped me to recognize the torture I have done to others. Without the heartache, I would never have learned who I really am, and come to understand the power of acceptance. Without the despair, I would not have had the desire to become a better person.
The saints talk about having a despair so strong it becomes unbearable. The despair they feel is specific, it is the agony they feel from not having a direct experience of God. The despair becomes so strong, that they would rather die than go another minute without Him. They describe it as getting to a point that their own sense of self becomes the thing that separates them from God; they feel that they “die” into oneness with the divine. I believe that is what Saint Paul meant when he said “I die daily.”
In my depressions, I feel tremendous despair. My mind keeps repeating over and over “kill yourself, kill yourself.” What if my perception keeps becoming clearer and I start to notice that the despair truly is for God? What if the self that I am trying to kill, is the “little self” that is keeping me from realizing the true nature that I believe is in each of us. This is our divine self. Jesus said “The kingdom of God is within you.” It seems that for at least some of us, it is depression and despair that gives us the ability to “see” our divine self. That is why depression is the best thing that ever happened to me.
(See Post that follows: “BiPolar In Order vs. Bipolar Disorder” for my opinion of Tom Wootton’s book “BiPolar In Order,” and my story of why I chose to purchase and use this book to help me with my Bipolar).
Research Explores the Positives of Bipolar Disorder
Research Explores the Positives of Bipolar Disorder
found in Science News:… from universities, journals, and other research organizations
ScienceDaily (May 3, 2012) — The problems of living with bipolar have been well documented, but a new study by Lancaster University has captured the views of those who also report highly-valued, positive experiences of living with the condition.
Researchers at Lancaster’s Spectrum Centre, which is dedicated to the study of bipolar disorder, interviewed and recorded their views of ten people with a bipolar diagnosis, aged between 24 and 57. Participants in the study reported a number of perceived benefits to the condition ranging from to sharper senses to increased productivity.
The research was designed to explore growing evidence that some people with bipolar value their experiences and in some cases would prefer not to be without the condition.
Participants described a wide range of experiences and internal states that they believed they felt to a far greater intensity than those without the condition. These included increased perceptual sensitivity, creativity, focus and clarity of thought.
Some held (or had previously held) high functioning professional jobs or had been studying for higher level qualifications. They described in detail how they experienced times when tasks that are usually quite difficult or time consuming, would feel incredibly easy and the ability to achieve at a high level during these times was clearly immensely rewarding.
Others expressed the view that they felt ‘lucky’ or even ‘blessed’ to have the condition.
Alan, (not his real name) one of the interviewees, said: “It’s almost as if it opens up something in the brain that isn’t otherwise there, and I see colour much more vividly than I used to……So I think that my access to music and art are something for which I’m grateful to bipolar for enhancing. It’s almost as if it’s a magnifying glass that sits between that and myself.”
Researchers even found some people with bipolar reaped positive experiences from their lows such as greater empathy with the suffering of others.
Dr Fiona Lobban, who led the study, said: “Bipolar Disorder is generally seen as a severe and enduring mental illness with serious negative consequences for the people with this diagnosis and their friends and family. For some people this is very much the case. Research shows that long term unemployment rates are high, relationships are marred by high levels of burden on family and friends and quality of life is often poor. High rates of drug and alcohol misuse are reported for people with this diagnosis and suicide rates are twenty times that of the general population.
“However, despite all these factors researchers and clinicians are aware that some aspects of bipolar experiences are also highly valued by some people. We wanted to find out what these positive experiences were.
“People were very keen to take part in this study and express views which some felt had to be hidden from the medical profession.
“It is really important that we learn more about the positives of bipolar as focusing only on negative aspects paints a very biased picture that perpetuates the view of bipolar as a wholly negative experience. If we fail to explore the positives of bipolar we also fail to understand the ambivalence of some people towards treatment.”
Rita Long from Stockport was not part of the study but can identify with its findings. She was 40 when she was diagnosed with the condition but from her school days she was aware that she experienced the world differently to her twin sister.
“We were making Christmas cakes at school and I was so interested and excited by it and my sister says she remembers watching me and thinking, ‘I really wish I could get that excited about making a Christmas cake’. I noticed things, experienced them with a different level of intensity, we’d be on a walk and I’d be saying look at the colour of this, and my sister would be saying, ‘It’s just a berry’. Socially too, people with bipolar can be quite quick witted, humorous. Until much later in life I just presumed those things were part of my personality.
“I don’t want to underestimate how difficult the bad times can be that some people go through with bipolar but at the same time I feel very passionate about the positives. If we are going to move on as a society — in academia, in business, in entertainment — we need people who will push boundaries. People with bipolar can do that.”
——————————————————————————–
Story Source:
The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Lancaster University, via AlphaGalileo.
——————————————————————————–
Journal Reference:
1.Fiona Lobban, Katherine Taylor, Craig Murray, Steven Jones. Bipolar Disorder is a two-edged sword: a qualitative study to understand the positive edge. Journal of Affective Disorders, 2012; DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2012.03.001




























