I was diagnosed twenty three years ago as Bipolar 1 after becoming psychotically manic after ingesting hallucinogens while premenstrual. I’ve said this many times, but I want to say it now because I’m about to disown my past. Finally and completely. And grab my future.
I became psychotic a number of times and that is because I took hallucinogens a number of times. Each time I took them (only if I was premenstrual) I landed in the psych ward. I got my period the next day in each case. This is drug induced mania. This is PMS on steroids. That’s all. I am not bipolar.
What I was then heavily medicated for were side effects to drugs and personality quirks or more clinically, a personality disorder or (god-forbid) characterological problems. And if you go by the DSM IV these personality tendencies I had were mild—I had no full-blown case of a diagnosable disorder, but I was uncomfortable at times and my doctor wanted to help with lots and lots of medication. Therapy and a good look at my traumatic childhood was not deemed important. I had a serious bio-chemical mood disorder according to them that would never go away and that I would have to take toxic drugs for for the rest of my life. Drugs that would possibly shorten my life by 25 years while making me gain 100 lbs and lose many IQ points and make me fatigued and sexless. I lived life without passion for many many years. My dysfunctional behavior never addressed. My life with trauma never recognized. I was never once asked if I had ever been abused. I’ve read a number of times that the correlation of childhood abuse and mental illness is extremely high. I don’t have time to find documentation right now, but I can say from personal experience as a social worker with the “severe and persistently mentally ill,” that a good 80% if not more were abused in some fashion. Abuse comes in many shapes and forms and parents need not be blamed in all instances, though there is no doubt that they certainly can be in many many cases but this is anathema in advocacy groups since families just don’t want to look at themselves — take NAMI for one example. Sometimes abuse seems benign. That is the hardest to call. But mind-fucking counts and most people just don’t realize that they may be doing that to their children. And I might add that as a mind-fucked child, I don’t blame my mother. I know she did the best she could and she is a good woman. My father was an abuser, my mother passed on her mind-fuckedness to me. I do blame my father, and my mother is not without responsibility though I love and forgive her completely. She is a big enough person to own her dysfunction and forgive herself. It doesn’t have to be about hating human frailty. It can involve forgiveness and love.
I also, while manic, experienced Spiritual Emergency. I had always been prone to deeply profound spiritual experiences without drugs. Again, on hallucinogens, those experiences cranked up. But I don’t believe I was crazy. Out of control yes. Out of touch with consensual reality yes. But crazy no. I was in touch with some beauty too. I was in touch with love. From my first post on this blog the story of an experience of love and spirituality:
In this altered state I had many exceptional experiences. I will share one with you. I came out of my suite one day to the sounds of people yelling. I looked down the hall and saw a young African American man wielding a gun pointed at someone who had done him wrong in a drug deal. A veil of peace came upon me. I calmly walked up to the man who was still yelling at his customer with gun in hand. I gently put my hand on his shoulder. He turned to look at me seemingly disarmed. I said “you don’t want to hurt anyone…come on let’s go.” I took his arm and led him away to the stairwell. We walked down to the first landing and stopped. I spoke to him about love and peace, we hugged and he left. I don’t remember exactly what I said and I know if sounds terribly cheesy, but it worked. I felt a huge sense of power and oneness with humankind.
Even in March of last year I did not completely own the beauty of that moment. I called it cheesy. It was not cheesy. It was beautiful and wondrous. That was stripped away from me when I was labeled a pathology. Later in life I would have two more experiences with psychotic men with knives. I was able to talk to them and also disarm them. I was not on psychedelic drugs. I still had that gift.
So I’m shedding my label of bipolar disorder. Loudly and publicly. I’ve tried to do this many times but no one really notices. My blog title has always said “Bipolar Blast: a thing of the past…..” I use the term bipolar so as to call out to all the other people wrongly diagnosed because I believe we are thousands and tens of thousands. The label does nothing but make it easy for a psychiatrist to put us into a box. Symptom clusters are called bipolar regardless of cause or etiology. I know people diagnosed bipolar when they are really suffering from PTSD and very very often they are suffering from a drug-induced mania (as in an adverse reaction to an antidepressant that doctors claim magically proves you’re bipolar). Other times people are suffering from terrible stress or simply problems with coping with life which in the spiritually inclined can simply be a spiritual crisis. Changing life-style, coming through the crisis, and owning your shit could be the answer rather than blaming it all on a brain disease and succumbing to the prevailing theory of mental illness.
I want to make it clear I do not judge those who choose to take meds. They are a tool and sometimes they are the only tool someone knows to use. Too often it is not brought to light that there are other tools and that many of us recover. That many of us, labeled schizophrenic, bipolar, schizo-affective, depressed and anxious have one or several episodes and move on — the “disease” worked out. Most of us don’t get to find out that that is possible. Many of us don’t want to know. We are afraid. I understand this fear intimately. I do not judge. I may seem to because I have passionate opinions, because I’m angry that I’ve been burned. But when confronted with people I know in my life and even here on the internet, as long as I’m not dismissed, I grant that it is ones right and total decision to do what they want with their body. I have many friends who accept their diagnosis’ and choose to take drugs. So be it. It’s nice to live in as free of a world as possible. I do not wish that we all be the same.
Live and let live.
But this is key. Many of us who do not wish to be drugged are forced to be drugged. We live with a mental health system that is coercive. Overtly and covertly. This must be challenged and changed.
The only thing I fight for is true informed consent. Most people are not informed. Most people do not know all the possibilities that lie behind their diagnosis. I want to save people who might become “intractable” before it’s too late because I believe that drugs are often the cause of intractability. So I’m out here saying my bit. Trying to lead by example. I’m lucky enough to have escaped the often inevitable downward spiral that never ends.
It is never wise to jump off drugs without thoroughly preparing. I have done nothing without taking very good care of myself and addressed and am addressing my emotional dysfunction—yes I still have live emotional dysfunction. No one should assume that it is safe to just stop taking drugs. It’s a huge commitment and responsibility. I would say that in my case it is a calling. I was on 11 mg of Risperdal, 200 mg Zoloft, 50 mg Seroquel, 400 mg Lamictal and 3 mg of Klonopin (up to 6 mg PRN) and in the end a variety of stimulants. You have to be called to get off all that. It is a vocation. No joke. I couldn’t do it otherwise. So no, I don’t judge—after a certain point it simply becomes behemoth.
So now I continue on my journey and I am undiagnosing myself. I am human and I have problems. That is the only diagnosis I am willing to live with now. Human problems. My life has not been easy. It has been no different from that of hundreds of thousands of people labeled bipolar. I still consider all who call themselves bipolar my brothers and sisters. And for that matter anyone else who has ever been labeled with any psychiatric disorder. We are family.
I write this in the early morning of the day I travel to California where I hope to find the key to finishing this long journey I’ve been on of psychiatric drug withdrawal and recovery. I am reclaiming my life and documenting it here.
For comments on this post from when I first posted it see here:

Trying to navigate my way through several blogs from your site. “Furious Seasons” has an enormous amount of info.
Thank you for such well expressed description of drug induced craziness. As you know from another website I have made my journey back to finding “me” again.
If only I could erase all the misdiagnosing on me that’s in so many medical files. I did have the doctors’ office sign forms that they couldn’t forward ANY info on me without my notarized signed consent. Hope it works….
Here’s to a world free of giving folks frightening labels and mega drugs instead of listening.
Funy thing, I read some books, “You Mean I don’t have to feel this way?”, there was a section on Bipolar, and well my Granny was looney toons, so I thought it explained why my life wasn’t working. Instead of looking inside my heart, and soul, I chose to think I was looney instead of my marriage was a desert, my sons would soon be gone, and I had short changed myself, lived an illussion far too long. I am not a quiter, hated thinking I had done the wrong thing, staying with him, and yes I was pre menopausal, and my Mom was dying slowly over 5 years. A lot of life altering changes, but no reason for a shrink not to understand the whole person, and load me up with mine altering drugs…. Getting my weight out of hand, he then gave me more medication as I was large!
I met a gal last fall at a NAMI meeting, who was in a weight loss program. I asked her what her meds were. First thing out of her mouth, was Zyprexa. I said hon, look at your meds, google, before you spend money on weight loss, all the dieting in the world, cannot correct some medications. I know the nutritionalist she’s working with, she should have known better, but she’s in it for the money. And I’m sure this patient s on assistance, so there’s the System for you. No checks and balances, which can indeed be harmful to your health and well being.
Thank you. Dear Gods, thank you for this blog.
I fully support you in your drug withdrawal as I too wish
to be drug free of psychotropics gradually. I am sick of listening to psychiatrists and therapy doctors tell me they claim they know that “everyone has evil thoughts,”"What are you guilty of!” and “you are a mean person.” “So do you want to kill anyone?” over and over again, and “Can’t you see you can’t finish college!” It is not just the drugs I need to get away from it is all the negative talk which accuses me of having evil thoughts that I clearly never had. In my opinion, it is the psychiatrists and therapists who are grossly psychotic because they go so far as to accuse people of future crimes, people who never did or say anything evil, but they can get everyone on their side, and that is one
reason I got canned from my last job, is because of all
the stereotypes I got labeled with that have nothing to do with my character and the good and upright life I have led. I am pretty determined to keep those liars, slanders conartists, and libelers out of my life. And I agree with you about childhood trauma too. I was a foster child, and you know how they get stereotyped too. But I got into an Ivy league school when I was 17 after going to 12 different schools and none of those loser doctors or loser therapists could ever do that, and then they had the nerve to tell me I couldn’t finish college. I had to put up with their verbal abuse for many years. They forced me to do volunteer work and wouldn’t let me go to school. But I kept fighting and graduated with high honors in an Engineering degree, against their “advice”, encouragement or faith in me. And almost all the women in the hospital had been molested as a child like me too. Then Nami goes and says that it is the molested children who grow up to suffer mentally that are “likely to commit serious violence.” I am sick of NAMI, I am sick of therapy, I am sick of psychiatrists, I am sick of drugs that caused tardive dyskinesia so bad I couldn’t read until my dose was lowered. I have to get away from them if I am going to survive, because all the things they did to me was worse than my original illness. I am determined to keep those cynical scoundrels out of my life for good. They have done more harm to me than all the abuse I endured in foster care and by my parents.
WOW I surely identify with this after my 12 year sojourn with psychiatry. Thanks for the big honestly about Mental Illness in all these posts, my daughter in the last two years has sided with my ideas that the big Pharmie companies are in a bog pay out to these mental health centers having people eat meds like jelly beans out of a candy dish. Yes I have supported NAMI and have read many stories of mental illness, but in the end it seems like coat yourself with honey and then tie yourself to a tree and wait for the Bear to come and devour you….. I have a PTSD list of things that is like some ocd folks and there can never be a drug to cure this or lessen my panic attacks. I must use my own therapuetic tactics to conquer my fears. I believe that mental illness is just big business and it is an Inconvient Truth, a way to get $ from HMO’s and Medicare, just more money for profit while Human Spirit is overly medicated. I say Just no to Drooling on myself, I have seriously said NO to DRUGS, Antipsychotics.
My daughter was diagonised with Bipolar at 19 and is now 31, she recently took herself off all her med’s and seemed calm, she was kinda forgetful and stressed some, but I would really like to believe she can do with out the zyprexa and lythiam.
She informed us she is PG and not taking any med’s , can anyone give us advise?
Thanks so much, how can I help her get through the withdraws and keep baby healthy. She is unmarried and her boyfriend is not ready for baby or her mood swings currently.
Thanks again, Cindy
Cindy,
The best thing I can recommend is that your daughter learn to care for her body and mind through things like diet, supplements, yoga, meditation and exercise…
You can go to the “about” page on this blog (at the top of the page)
and check out these yahoo groups to learn about alternative health care for mental health:
http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/ALT-therapies4bipolar/
http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/safeharbor2/
Staying healthy is a long term commitment and your daughter is the one who needs to make it. You can’t do it for her…
good luck.
[...] Undiagnosing myself [...]
WOW!!! Thank you! I am almost in tears to find folks like me, misdiagnosed as bipolar. I have PTSD and have lived in 4 foster homes. I am a buddhist and I meditate and do yoga and get acupuncture. I am currently trying to get off of 5oo fricking mg of satans poison..yup, seroquel. I am not able to work much because I cant sleep very well. When I wake in the night I take 2ml of passion flower tincture and I go back to sleep. Passion flower is INCREDIBLE. I have researched it and it does not conflict with the 4 drugs that I am on. Screw these Dr.’s , and there one track mind. It is time to stand up for ourselves and become informed consumers. When youre feeling low go http://www.forthelittleonesinside.com.
Peace and peace of mind to all, have compassion for yourself my brothers and sisters.
LOVE LOVE LOVE IS THE GLUE THAT HOLDS THE UNIVERSE TOGETHER.
Lisa,
Welcome to my site and thanks for the link…
Passion flower is indeed good stuff—I use it too.
Good luck with your seroquel taper, contact me if you want to talk about it sometime…
best to you.
I came across and read some of your blog today. I am so glad that you are undiagnosing yourself and that you are doing it via blogging which helps others in their own efforts.
Shed the label. Shred the label. Take it as slowly and easily as you need to at times when things get harder, you’ll get there in the end however long it takes.
Go girl Go
How long would you say it has taken you to be off lamictal and not experience any side effects? My daughter has finally gotten off all drugs but is dealing with anxiety and lack of concentration. I am very concerned that the doctor will add a mood stabilizer back to her regimen when I am not sure that all her drugs are truly out of her system. It has been 4-6 weeks since she completed getting off all her meds.
Would love to hear back from you.
Thanks!
4 - 6 weeks is certainly not enough time to get over withdrawal symptoms. You also don’t state how quickly she went off of how many drugs…
If it was a rapid withdrawal she could be in a danger zone.
Is she doing anything to support her body and mind with things like diet, nutrition, meditation, exercise etc?
People can take a couple of years to recover from the effects of drugging, but they also have to be doing things to heal themselves of underlying issues…like for whatever got them on meds in the first place. And to heal the damage done by the drugs.
Check out my About page for more information and resources and find someone who can help you…
http://bipolarblast.wordpress.com/about/
There is no way I can possibly tell you what is going on with your daughter.
Wow. I was diagnosed a second time this year for bipolar. The first time, I felt like you - just bags upon bags of childhood crap. The second hospital stay was brought on by extreme emotional stress, and yes… I was PMS tho not taking anything.
I hated the label the first time. The second time, i thought well, they must be right. I’m meeting my doctor Friday for my first out of the hospital meeting. I’m going to talk to her about coming off some of the medication and whether I can iron out my own “emotional dysfunction” as well.
Thank you for what you’ve shared. Thank you, thank you, thank you.
I wish you the best boundbyfaith. If your name is based on anything you actually believe…do follow your faith…and trust yourself and your higher power.
Hi Gianna
I have just gotten to your site. Great reading here. I will be here for awhile.
Thanks for all this wonderful sharing.
Cheers,
Sally
Hi Gianna,
I got here by way of your post on glutamine and other amino acids. I have never been diagnosed, but imagine my surprise, after a lifetime of mood problems and chronic fatigue, to find out that BD runs in the family — and no one ever told me. In fact, my brother, a psychiatrist, told me it was depression and once recommended I go on Paxil. What a disaster! I still don’t know why he never told me about BD except maybe he didn’t want to admit to anyone HE had it. Thank God my husband of 10 years stayed with me — and that I didn’t kill myself — until I figured it out on my own.
That being said, I am doing a totally natural approach, working with a medical intutitive to confirm dosages. Since every program is individual, I won’t post mine here, except to say I rely heavily on amino acids and neutraceuticals for the brain. I also do homeopathic neurotransmitters and brain supplements, which seem to be very uplifting. My aim it to get as stable as possible, boost my energy, and get regular sleep, food and excercise. I also am developing a set of supplements to take prophylactically when I find myself getting unstable - either manic or depressed.
One of the biggest breakthroughs that I’m happy to share was my initial discovery — lithium aspartate. It is a natural lithium salt (like lithium orotate) that is about 10 times more powerful than the drug lithium chloride. As a result, you can take as little as 5 or 10 mg a day (I take 10 mg 3X per day) without getting any side effects. And it works! I believe that the main action is in regulating the biological clock (now implicated in a wide variety of mood and sleep disorders) but it also blocks the arachodonic acid cascade (see the wikipedia) which is what leads to prostaglandins, the villains of PMS. My brother, who actually does know a thing or two, thinks BD may be a problem with ion channels in the brain, and yes, lithium helps there, too. Finally, lithium has been shown to be neuroprotective in that it prevents the breakdown of glial cells in the prefrontal cortex, the site of a lot of brain cell loss in untreated BD patients.
If you’re going off drugs, I do think it might be wise to look into supplements that protect your brain from cortisol. Apparently BD people have higher levels of stress (no kidding!!) so an herbal formula like New Chapter Stress Advantage, or powdered chia seeds, or even SAMe for some can be very helpful. I’m also take supps to regenerate brain cells — these generally contain choline, such as phosphatidyl choline or Alpha-GPC, or I take phosphatidyl serine. More about these later.
You mentioned that you were working with an orthomolecular psychiatrist. I think that’s great. Can you send me a referral? I’d love to get diagnosed properly and rule out any other causes (I’ve been on the hormone trail for about a year) and actually get help with my holistic approach, rather than getting shoved a bunch of drugs.
Thanks for putting up a great blog and I hope to hear from you.
Michele
Hi Gianna,
I just wanted to correct my email address.
Good luck to everyone out there who is reading this!
Michele
Hi Michelle,
Again thanks for all the lovely stuff you’ve posted…
I can’t send you a referral now, but like I said before…I will write you an email when i get the chance…
I’m really happy you stopped by.
Dear folks- thank you for sharing your experiences. I have been diagnosed with severe panic disorder since I was 30, then added in dysthymia, then added in delusion (I was cold turkeying from Ativan and had, I believe- dt’s.) Now- no delusions no panic no nothing. I am on klonopin .2X a day, seroquel 600 (yep) mg per night to sleep, and prozac, as well as a host of antihypertensives. Then add in adderal recently as I just got the additional diagnosis of ADD.
Where to start?
I’m 55 and have no social support, no family, live in a homeless shelter…..and just wing it day by day. I cannot stand living this way. Any advice appreciated.
dear m’am or sir?? (sorry I don’t know what to call you, but you are dear)
I am so sorry you find yourself in such a difficult situation and I really do not have any advice being that I do not know you or where you live or what kind of resources there might be in your area for someone in your circumstance.
I guess I can suggest you try to find a sympathetic and more importantly COMPASSIONATE social worker or case worker who will LISTEN to you and figure out with you what you want and need and then help you take the necessary baby steps to change your circumstances.
As long as we are alive there is always hope. Don’t give up and believe in yourself. You have a right to self-determination so exercise it.
when you say you’re winging it day by day….I don’t see that as such a bad thing. We all, in every station in life, must take things one day at a time and none of us know what tomorrow will bring.
I wish you the best and that you will find the answers you need that will help propel you forward into a life with which you can be contented.
love to you,
G