LEMEME123 wrote:
Railey2 wrote:
yeah i figured, but what exactly?
intense mood swings are something that many people experience, but that doesn't mean that they are bipolar.
Most people that self-diagnosed bipolar disorder just have mood swings to the negative (depression), but not to the other extreme (mania).
Remember that you need to have at least one account of a manic mood swing before you can be diagnosed with bipolar disorder.
Yeah I see I've noticed the swing to the other positive but it would prolly be like hypomania, not full mania. So it would be bipolar II
i just took a look at your profile and, as it turns out, you're VERY young.
They used to call these moodswings tantrums, not symptoms of bipolar disorders. These sort of outbursts are more than expected when children enter puberty, because
a) their hormones are running wild
b) the parent-child relationship changes, acts of defiance become more common etc.
i think there's no need to think of yourself as ill yet.
Unless your ''symptoms'' are very extreme (i knew someone who woke up in a different city with no memory of what happened the last two days after a manic episode), there is no reason to assume that what you experience is outside the normal range of behavior for people your age.
There is a reason why self diagnosis generally gets discouraged. People really love categorizing everything, including their own mental health, which makes the prone to latch on to labels such as bipolar.
Since ''normal'' isn't really thought of as a satisfying label once you have an abundance of other labels at your disposal, people tend to think of themselves as ill, ignoring all the advice that they might be given by professionals.
But thinking of yourself as ill when you're actually normal can have horrible drawbacks. Better stay away from all that and ignore the whole mental health community until you realize that you have an actual condition that causes a severe impairment of your day to day life.