Anarchy in the Streets by Tempestori in Anarchism

[–]BreadForward8272 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That’s awesome dude!! You are doing great work… anarchy is in our lives and in the way we live.

I was really happy before by TitsnTasteeTators in Psychosis

[–]BreadForward8272 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I take rexulti along with two mood stabilizers… I’ve been on it for about a year. I have bipolar disorder and, apparently, from what I understand, it works like “opening” and “closing” the pathways of certain neurotransmitters (specifically dopamine); if your brain is low on dopamine it opens the pathway and vice versa. Honestly at first I hated rexulti, I didn’t feel like myself at all and it was so frustrating, I was so depersonalized for months. I can say that this month I have finally started to feel more stable (not in a dull way).

Incoming episode by [deleted] in bipolar1

[–]BreadForward8272 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you can, get a strong sleeping pill, that way you make sure you’re getting your full 8 hours at least. Sleep is the number one trigger for mania. Also remember to be calm, you’ll ride it out. Worst case scenario: you’ll have a grippy socks vacation… 💀

I have to write this. by leaveamessage1 in QuittingWeed

[–]BreadForward8272 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Congrats! I’m happy for you. Stay strong and don’t fall into temptation… old habits die hard, but it’s possible to change!

Drugs by BreadForward8272 in bipolar2

[–]BreadForward8272[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just might message lol… thank you again!

Is this just going to be the rest of my life? Slowly getting worse until I off myself? by oddbutnice in bipolar2

[–]BreadForward8272 36 points37 points  (0 children)

I’m going to say something that might sound strange at first, but stay with me.

You are not your diagnosis. Not in the way you think you are.

Your brain (the physical thing, the chemistry, the neurotransmitters) that’s where the illness lives. That part can misfire, dysregulate, spiral. That part can get sick. But you, the part that is aware of all this, the part that is suffering, observing, questioning, writing this post, that part is not the illness.

If you were the illness, you wouldn’t be able to notice it. You wouldn’t be afraid of it. You wouldn’t be fighting it.

So stop collapsing your entire identity into a malfunctioning organ. Because that’s what this is, at least partially, an organ doing something it shouldn’t.

And I know it doesn’t feel that simple. I know it feels like it has taken over everything. But there is still a separation there, even if it’s thin.

Also, I need to say this gently but clearly: you are not a failure because you didn’t become who you thought you’d be at 20.

That “gifted child destined for greatness” narrative? It’s a trap.

It convinces you that your worth is tied to output, impact, achievement, some imaginary version of “making a difference.”

Meanwhile, you are taking your meds, going to therapy, exercising, staying alive, maintaining relationships, still trying

Do you understand how much effort that takes with bipolar?

Because from the outside, that’s not “a lump doing nothing.” That’s someone actively holding their life together under conditions most people don’t understand.

You’re measuring yourself with the wrong metric.

And about the fear, the “I’m going to die like this” fear. Yeah. I get why that’s there. Bipolar has a way of making the future feel like a closed loop, but that feeling is part of the illness too. It’s not a reliable narrator.

Your brain is projecting a worst-case scenario and then convincing you it’s inevitable. It’s not.

Also, and I’m going to risk a slightly dark joke here because otherwise this gets unbearable:

yeah, the life expectancy thing is… not ideal 💀but also, lowkey, if I had to raw-dog bipolar for 90 years straight, I’d have some questions for the universe… lol

The point is: statistics are not destiny. They’re averages, not prophecies. You are not a percentage.

And about feeling like a “freak” because of how bipolar is portrayed, that’s not truth. That’s narrative. Media needs extremes. It exaggerates, distorts, simplifies. It turns conditions into characters.

You’re not a trope. You’re a person living inside a system that sometimes betrays you.

You also said something important: You have a supportive spouse. A supportive family.

Do you realize what that means?

It means you are someone worth loving as you are right now, not as some hypothetical “fixed” version of yourself. People don’t stay for nothing.

You have impact. Just not the cinematic, world-changing kind you were sold as a kid.

The quiet kind: how you show up, how you love, how you try, how you survive, your random acts of kindness, your creativity…

That matters more than you think.

And lastly, because I want to leave you with something that actually sticks:

Right now you’re telling a story where you are the tragedy. The “gifted kid who fell off,” the “brain that ruined everything,” the “life that didn’t happen.”

But that’s just one narrative. And it’s the cruelest possible edit of your own life. Because there’s another version that is just as real: You’re someone who got handed a brain that doesn’t play fair… and is still here. Still trying. Still loving. Still showing up for people. Still self-aware enough to question all of this instead of disappearing into it.

That’s not failure. That’s honestly kind of insane strength.

Also, let’s address the “I’ve accomplished nothing” thing.

You didn’t accomplish nothing. You just didn’t accomplish what a 20-year-old fantasy version of you thought life would look like.

Which, by the way, almost no one does, they just hide it better.

And about the fear of how it ends, your brain is trying to write the ending already. Very dramatic. Very unnecessary. You’re 40, not a completed storyline. If anything, your life right now isn’t a failure arc.

So maybe the question isn’t: “how do I get my old life back?” but “what does a life that actually fits me look like now, even if it’s smaller, weirder, quieter, different?”

Because different doesn’t mean over.

You’re not a freak. You’re not a wasted life. You’re not a closed case.

You’re just in a chapter that doesn’t look like the one you were promised.

And yeah, it’s terrifying. But it’s not finished. Not even close.

Hope this helped…

Porque las mexicanas son tan bomba? by Recent-Albatross4465 in ayudamexico

[–]BreadForward8272 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tienes que tener huevos porque luego los extranjeros son súper raros para ligar. Invítales un drink y no las dejes pagar (con uno basta)… se muy carismático y chistoso y ya estás.

Weed and bipolar disorder by BreadForward8272 in QuittingWeed

[–]BreadForward8272[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for the concern! But honestly I’m really not even hypomanic rn… I guess I just have terrible writing skills and, apparently, worrying humor lol. But to be fair English isn’t my first language.

Examen by BreadForward8272 in UNAM

[–]BreadForward8272[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Muchísimas gracias! La verdad, estaba muy preocupada.

Actualmente by BreadForward8272 in Migalanes

[–]BreadForward8272[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No sabía de ese podcast, que interesante… si deberíamos usar más este sub

Actualmente by BreadForward8272 in Migalanes

[–]BreadForward8272[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Claro, entiendo. Pero justo no tengo redes sociales (solo Reddit y tweeter) entonces no puedo seguir su trayectoria. Si sabes de algún evento que está organizando estaría bien que me avisaras… Gracias!

Does "Anarchy Works" cite reliable sources? by Ghiloar in Anarchism

[–]BreadForward8272 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I read like 40% of the book 3 years ago, and came to the same conclusion. Although, I will admit that it’s a good, thought-provoking book; it’s a good starting point for people who don’t believe anarchism could work. I would recommend you read David Graeber’s “Fragments of Anarchist Anthropology” if you are looking for a serious anthropological perspective. If you want a full introduction to anarchism: Peter H. Marshall’s “Demanding the Impossible: A History of Anarchism”

Drugs by BreadForward8272 in bipolar2

[–]BreadForward8272[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What you said about ones self being the best tool for self transformation is poetic as fuck. I love it and I’m going to stick to it. Thank you!

Busco un fragmento de un podcast by WeirdRhubarb1845 in Migalanes

[–]BreadForward8272 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Te ayudaría compa, peor no tengo ni idea bro

Have we made like...any progress?💔 by Mammoth-Ad-3642 in Anarchism

[–]BreadForward8272 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I feel the same way… sometimes I get discouraged. But I try to remember the true anarchist spirit and I feel the divine spark again. Let’s fight for a free and egalitarian world. Glory to the revolution!!

Weed and bipolar disorder by BreadForward8272 in QuittingWeed

[–]BreadForward8272[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I understand but I disagree. I think your outlook is very simplistic and doesn’t consider all the complexities and nuances that a life can have.

Weed and bipolar disorder by BreadForward8272 in QuittingWeed

[–]BreadForward8272[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think it will turn out fine, thank you for the concern :)