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Living Well with Depression and Bipolar Disorder
What Your Doctor Doesn't Tell You...That You Need to Know
by 
John McManamy
  
Publisher: HarperCollins
Subject(s):  Health & Fitness
Nonfiction
Self-Improvement

Format Information

Adobe PDF eBook Add to Cart
Available copies:  
Library copies:  
File size:   2243 KB
ISBN:   9780061211706
Release date:   Oct 17, 2006

Description

Seven years ago, John McManamy was diagnosed with bipolar disorder. Through his successful Web site and newsletter, he has turned his struggles into a lifelong dedication to helping others battling depression and bipolar disorder reclaim their lives. In Living Well with Depression and Bipolar Disorder, he brilliantly blends the knowledge of leading expert authorities with the experiences of his fellow patients, as well as his own, and offers extensive information on:

  • Diagnosing the problem
  • Associated illnesses and symptoms
  • Treatments, lifestyle, and coping
  • The effects of depression and bipolar disorder on relationships and sex

With a compassionate and eloquent voice, McManamy describes his belief that depression is a wide spectrum that reaches from occasional bouts of depression to full-fledged bipolar disorder. The first book to help patients recognize this diversity of the disorder, Living Well with Depression and Bipolar Disorder will help sufferers begin to reclaim their lives.

 

Excerpts

Chapter One

Getting Acquainted: Me, You, and the Spectrum We Share...

I have an MD. It stands for manic depression. In January 1999, at age forty-nine, following a series of severe depressions and a lifetime of denial, I was diagnosed with manic depression's successor label, bipolar disorder, so technically my MD is now BP, which pisses me off no end. After what this illness has done to me, I feel I have every right to call myself an MD.

Screw the medical profession. What do they have on me? Well, they were smart enough to save my life, so I take it back.

My real qualifications are these: I am a former financial journalist with a law degree. My subsequent research into my illness led to me writing about depression for the Web site Suite 101.com, which in turn motivated me to start the only Internet newsletter devoted to depression and bipolar disorder, McMan's Depression and Bipolar Weekly. A year and a half after launching my newsletter, I began a Web site, McMan's Depression and Bipolar Web (www.mcmanweb.com), which now has more than three hundred articles.

This book draws from more than six years of research that have gone into my newsletter and Web site. It is perhaps the first book on mood disorders that attempts to integrate expert opinion from a wide range of disciplines—from psychiatry and neurology and genetics to nutrition and spirituality. Equally important, this book acknowledges the wisdom and insight of those who have experienced depression and bipolar disorder firsthand. Many of these people have written to me directly. Others have posted comments on my Web site. Perhaps you are one of them.

"Please," writes Brian, "may I have my life back and start over again?."

Forget for the time being whether it's depression or bipolar disorder my readers are talking about. Simply listen.

"It's humiliating to me," says Bob, "to have to admit that there is something wrong with me mentally. I hate living this way. I have hope that I can be fixed or healed, but how can I face the people I love and apologize for my behavior and ask for forgiveness?"

Says Kali:

I realize that there are worse things out there, but to dream of having one good day let alone a good week, without having to feel anxiety, or wanting to give up, or confusion, short memory, loss of concentration, and no patience with family. I dream and pray to feel peace and happiness every day. And fight against my illness daily.

And from Claire:

I'm a talented person with a master's degree, but I have no partner, no family, no children, no full-time job, no career, no house, etc, etc. I have given in to my diagnosis, which is tragic.

I know if I had better self-esteem, I would like and appreciate myself just the way I am. I would revel in my talents as a writer and artist, and I might even revel in the extreme moods I've had. But the depressions. Oh, the depressions. I don't know why I haven't killed myself yet. I just haven't been successful at it. Whether I commit suicide or not isn't even the issue, because I have been dead inside for many years now. Stagnant and isolated, unable to create, and alone.

Loneliness. The isolation can be worse than the illness. Eleanor writes: "I ended up losing my job, my boyfriend, making my kids feel confused and afraid. I am still trying to recover of all of it and unsure about the future." And in a similar vein, a year after his diagnosis, Kyle writes: "I only just about manage to hold a job down. I'm frustrated that my boss and my coworkers are unable to understand how I feel and, as yet, have been unable to tell my family for the same reason—a lack of comprehension. I would just be told to 'pull myself together.'

 

Reviews

Amy Weintraub, author of YOGA FOR DEPRESSIONS...
“This book belongs in the hands of every person who has suffered from depression or bipolar disorder.”
 

About the Author

John McManamy is the publisher of the award-winning McMan's Depression and Bipolar Weekly and the Web site McMan's Depression and Bipolar Web.www.mcmanweb.com

Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins authors.

Digital Rights Information

Adobe PDF eBook
Copy:  allowed, but limited to 42 times every 7 days
Print:  allowed, but limited to 42 pages every 7 days
 


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