Therapy and Lifestyle Changes
June 14, 2009 by BipolarChick
Filed under CBT, Mental Health, Recovery, Self-Help & Improvement, Stress Management, Therapy, Treatment
Classic psychotherapy does not help most patients with bipolar disorder. Nevertheless, many newer approaches are proving to be very useful. Trained mental health professionals can:
- Educate patients about bipolar disorder and its treatments
- Help them comply with drug regimens
- Monitor the patient’s on-going status
- Intervene early in manic and depressive episodes to reduce the severity of the attack
In addition, trained professionals can help patients:
- Adjust to the reality of the illness and understand the negative consequences of mania — particularly important for patients who consider their mania to be positive, creative, and exhilarating
- Cope with feelings of guilt and remorse that occur after manic episodes
- Deal with feelings of imperfection and despair
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Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #7
June 8, 2009 by BipolarChick
Filed under CBT, OCD, Personal Stories, Relationships
by Anonymous
Lesbians Everywhere: A gay spiker confronts her pure-O theme about getting an answer to her sexual orientation question
This particular tale of OCD begins with a crush on a boy named Sam.
I was a very happy girl. I was about to graduate at the top of my high school class, spent bags of time with my friends, and was enjoying my crush, of course. Sam, however, didn’t like receiving my attention as much as I liked giving it. About four months after we met, I heard from a mutual friend that Sam was gay.
I was a bit depressed and slightly embarrassed. Sam hadn’t turned out to be the love of my young life. Mostly, though, I felt relieved to know his true colors, and hoped that he (and I) would be happy with future boyfriends.
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Table of contents for CBT Success Stories
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #1
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #2
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #3
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #4
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #5
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #6
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #7
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #6
June 7, 2009 by BipolarChick
Filed under CBT, OCD, Personal Stories
by Anonymous
From prisoner to gate keeper…A woman exposes her children to perceived risks so that she might liberate herself from the confines of OCD and pursue a career in psychology.
During my second pregnancy, at age 18, I experienced the onset of OCD. This 18 year time lapse is due to the following reasons. During this time period there was progressive expansion of peculiar feelings, fears and behaviors and I had no concept that these symptoms related to any disorder. I didn’t even know there was such a disorder as OCD. I thought I was overprotective (giving away my children’s puppy to keep them from harm), a worrier (spending fruitless hours problem solving what hazards threatened them), and a little off the wall (I wouldn’t let them visit friend’s houses who had pets).
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Table of contents for CBT Success Stories
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #1
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #2
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #3
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #4
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #5
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #6
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #7
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #5
June 6, 2009 by BipolarChick
Filed under CBT, OCD, Personal Stories
by Anonymous
A responsibility OC combats her obsessive concerns for harming others while managing medical school.
I was born with OCD. My mother tells me that as a toddler I would pull out my hair. This was probably baby trichotilomania, which is associated with OCD. For almost 30 years OCD caused me mental anguish that I’m sure only few people can appreciate. My story is probably not an unusual one for sufferers of OCD. It’s replete with pain and confusion, difficulties with family and friends, and extreme fears that strike others as ridiculous and bizarre. Professionals misdiagnosed me more than once.
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Table of contents for CBT Success Stories
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #1
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #2
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #3
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #4
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #5
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #6
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #7
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #4
June 5, 2009 by BipolarChick
Filed under CBT, OCD, Personal Stories
by Anonymous
I was a happy little baby until it was time for first grade. I woke up everyday with a knot in my stomach that was only relieved by vomiting. I was scared of the teacher, of my fellow students, and of doing poorly. My first obsessive incident soon followed, and although I don’t remember, my father tells me that I used to throw fits every morning because I could not decide what to wear. Dad took away all of my outfits except two and the problem was solved. Unfortunately, there was more to come, as I began to develop physical habits; I breathed strangely, I did things with my feet as I walked, I crossed my eyes and I made noises in my throat. I did these things because I wondered “should I make a noise?” Or maybe I shouldn’t make a noise. Do I need to make a noise? I would make one and feel fulfilled for about three seconds. Then the voices would return, and the process would continue every second of every day. My parents and I began therapy but only discussed my nervousness and my daily separation from my mother.
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Table of contents for CBT Success Stories
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #1
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #2
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #3
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #4
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #5
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #6
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #7
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #3
June 4, 2009 by BipolarChick
Filed under CBT, OCD, Personal Stories
by Anonymous
I am grateful for the opportunity to give a testimonial about my therapy with Steven Phillipson. I’m not a person given to hyperbole. But to say that Steven Phillipson changed my life is no exaggeration. My big problem was responsibility OC: an intense feeling of responsibility for the safety of others (and myself). I would check kitchen gas jets countless times to see if they were off. I would warn family members and friends about possible adverse effects from illnesses or drug combinations — and repeat my warnings many times for fear they didn’t understand my point. I would feel an urge to call the city transportation department every time I saw a pothole or a broken traffic light. Of course I knew that my thoughts and actions were problematic and undesirable. But I was powerless to change course.
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Table of contents for CBT Success Stories
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #1
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #2
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #3
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #4
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #5
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #6
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #7
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #2
June 3, 2009 by BipolarChick
Filed under CBT, OCD, Personal Stories
by Professor Mike
I am presently fifty-four years old and have suffered from OCD since I was fifteen. Although originally a native New Yorker, I have been a college professor in the Deep South for at least twenty years. During my life my OCD has focused on different issues: e.g., concerns about scratches on eyeglass lenses, whether eyeglasses were properly adjusted, wristwatch straps that might cut off circulation, inappropriate noises in the environment. This last concern became so severe that eventually chronic obsessing about the origin of neighborhood noises prompted at least one relocation.
I have seen several psychiatrists. None of these really offered a therapy that worked. I have tried the following drugs at one time or another: elavil, limbitrol, sinequan, Ativan, Valium, Xanax, Prozac, Zoloft. Although some of these drugs relieved the anxiety and depression which accompanied my OCD, none eliminated the root cause of my distress which were obsessive thoughts and rituals. They also had bad side effects. Currently I take no drugs.
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Table of contents for CBT Success Stories
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #1
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #2
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #3
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #4
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #5
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #6
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #7
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #1
June 2, 2009 by BipolarChick
Filed under CBT, OCD, Personal Stories
by Margarita, a graduate of Dr. Phillipson’s Behavior Therapy Group
My OCD. This is how I refer to this “Disorder.” I put it in quotes because I have a very hard time accepting that it is a condition that I did not bring on myself. I mean, I always thought that my obsessiveness was me — brought on by me. But I guess it doesn’t matter whether it is a mental condition, or a way of thinking which became a habit. What is important to me, is that I take steps to change.
By steps, I mean risks. I learned of the concept of risk taking for treating OCD in my therapy sessions with Dr. Steven Phillipson, a clinical psychologist at the Institute for Behavior Therapy, in New York City. The key element of the treatment is learning to live with uncertainty. It is taking the risk of not ruminating (problem solving) about things that I am afraid might happen. If you will notice, most obsessions concern things that we are not sure about. For example, I can obsess endlessly about people that I think may not like me. The subjects of my obsessions are usually people I don’t know well but that I come in contact with on a regular basis (e.g. neighbors), so I could never really know whether they do or do not like me. With therapy, I learned to say “Yes, maybe the neighbors don’t like me, but I’m not going to take the risk of ruminating about it, and I will not attend to any other thoughts related to these people.”
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Table of contents for CBT Success Stories
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #1
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #2
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #3
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #4
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #5
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #6
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Success Stories – #7
Understanding Treatment for Bipolar Disorder
January 2, 2009 by BipolarChick
Filed under Alternative Treatments, Anti-Anxiety, Anti-Convulsants, Anti-Depressants, Anti-Psychotics, Bipolar Disorder, CBT, Group Therapy, Medications, Mood Stabilizers, Psychotherapy, Recovery, Self-Help & Improvement, Therapy, Treatment
At present, treatment for bipolar disorder is most often with a combination of a mood-stabilizing drug and psychotherapy. The main mood-stabilizing drugs used for the treatment of bipolar disorder include lithium carbonate, valproic acid (also known as Depakote) and carbamazepine (Tegretol), Lamictal, Topamax, Gabitril, and many other antiepileptic agents. They also include some newer antipsycohitic agents.
While drug treatment is primary, ongoing psychotherapy is important to help patients understand and accept the personal and social disruptions of past episodes and better cope with future ones. In addition, since denial is often a problem, routine psychotherapy helps patients stay on their medications. (Patient compliance is particularly tricky in adolescence.) Almost all forms of psychotherapy can be used — cognitive, behavioral, or psychodynamic; individual, family, or group therapy.
The family or spouse of a patient should be involved with any treatment. Having full information about the disease and its manifestations is important for both the patient and loved ones.
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Table of contents for Bipolar Disorder 101:
- Introduction to Bipolar Disorder: What You Need to Know
- Types of Bipolar Disorder
- Common Symptoms of Bipolar Disorder
- Diagnosis of Bipolar Disorder
- Causes of Bipolar Disorder
- After Diagnosis of Bipolar Disorder
- Treatment for Bipolar Disorder
- Medications Used to Treat Bipolar Disorder
- Coping with Bipolar Disorder
- For Friends and Family of Bipolars
- Teen Bipolar Disorder
- Risk Factors for Bipolar Disorder
- Understanding Treatment for Bipolar Disorder
- Tips on Managing Mania
- Managing the Balancing Act with Bipolar Disorder
- Ten Common Mistakes People Who Have Bipolar Disorder Make
- Take Control of Your Life and Bipolar Disorder
- Complications of Bipolar Disorder
Frequently Asked Questions about PTSD
December 20, 2008 by BipolarChick
Filed under CBT, Mental Illness, PTSD, Therapy, Treatment
Is the cause of PTSD simply a traumatic event?
Although PTSD begins after a traumatic event, other factors also play an important role. The severity, type, and circumstances of the traumatic event may determine whether or not a person develops PTSD. In addition, some individuals appear to be more vulnerable to PTSD. It is possible that underlying differences in the makeup of a person’s personality or brain physiology may contribute to the onset of PTSD.






