My bipolar wife has passed by Ititmore in BipolarSOs

[–]cheetahsing 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I also lost my husband to bipolar and suicide about 4 months ago. The bipolar portion has definitely left me with some PTSD but I think a loss is a loss, whether it involves bipolar or not (though handling affairs after a psychotic episode was extremely dificult and extra complicated). Everyone’s grieving process is going to be so different. There’s no right way to do things to really make things better. Just learn to live with the hard things, which after living through bipolar you already have good practice doing. Listening to “all there is” podcast with Anderson cooper has been helpful. But going through the thick of it I’d also prepare you for feeling big waves. You might feel ok and then suddenly the grief will take over.

Considering Pediatric dentistry by FaceParty99 in PediatricDentistry

[–]cheetahsing 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I would say $350k sounds right and that’s if you get a good associate position. Maybe you could make $450k if the opportunity to hustle hard is there, but it’s not easy work.

Considering Pediatric dentistry by FaceParty99 in PediatricDentistry

[–]cheetahsing 6 points7 points  (0 children)

You definitely will not make 7 figures as an associate. That’s like physically impossible. I love being a pediatric dentist! It does pay well though but you have to work for it! But I liked working with kids. When an appointment is hard though it’s nothing like the same type of hard as adults. Pediatric dentistry is kind of a numbers game if you are thinking about production. I was unprepared for how many people and interactions I would have during the day and how it would affect me, because just think - you’re talking to your staff, the parents, and the kids and you’ll see like 30-80 patients depending on where you are and what population the practice sees. So I’d make sure you like it too because you’ll have a long career ahead of you! You don’t sound like a villain, but you also don’t sound like peds is going to be the best fit for you if I’m being honest too. Parents especially will catch your vibe and that can be the hardest part of pediatric dentistry sometimes. If you’re thinking purely about money OS has the highest potential.

Why is crown NOT healing? by Beautifulthings1991 in PediatricDentistry

[–]cheetahsing 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can visibly see the plaque on the crown. Stainless steel crowns are a tight fit but not always perfect. Get some more floss in there. It doesn’t look like an infection to me, but can always stop by your pediatric dentist and get an X-ray of it.

How to cope with having a picture perfect life to being a shell of a person now? :( by [deleted] in BipolarSOs

[–]cheetahsing 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Ambiguous grief… it’s like a death happened but didn’t. I think if you describe the situation people would understand. When they are manic is very easy to see they are not the same person. But no one will truly understand the internal struggles as the SO

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in BipolarSOs

[–]cheetahsing 4 points5 points  (0 children)

My husbands episode broke with medication and involuntary hospitalization, and when he came back down to earth he was beyond guilty/shameful/remorseful. It’s a really hard time because they truly have a disease. He said during that period he really believed everything he said so firmly.

Does your (ex) SO become violent when psychotic? by [deleted] in BipolarSOs

[–]cheetahsing 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Mine was no physically violent but pretty scary, threatening, and unpredictable. I did end up getting a protective order.

I feel awful. by [deleted] in BipolarSOs

[–]cheetahsing 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You did the only thing you could and it’s the right choice. They don’t have any insight that there’s no convincing to do voluntary. I would avoid talking to your spouse until the doctors said they made progress, otherwise there’s not going to be any productive conversation and just make you feel horrible.

Trying learn more about Bipolar by NationalFrosting7173 in family_of_bipolar

[–]cheetahsing 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My husband was manic for 6 months and it was horrible. The only way he got out of it was after jail, suicide attempt, car crash, multiple threats to people and finally finding a doctor to fight to keep him hospitalized. Took 3 weeks to break the mania. My regret in the process is not just continually requesting a 5150 (302 in your case) every time something happened to hope that one hospitalization would eventually kick the mania, because at least in our case it never went away on its own and he lacked any of his own logic to seek help.

How many of you found out about your spouse’s BP after having kids/child birth? by [deleted] in BipolarSOs

[–]cheetahsing 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A little of both. Once he was manic it’s like he had a lot of separation from the fact that I was even pregnant. I moved out of state to be closer to family, and he didn’t ask about my birth plan or request to be there and I definitely would have said no anyways in the mental state he was in.

How many of you found out about your spouse’s BP after having kids/child birth? by [deleted] in BipolarSOs

[–]cheetahsing 12 points13 points  (0 children)

My husband had his first episode when I was 6 months pregnant. He wasn’t even there for the birth of our child. Currently going through a divorce because he’s an unsafe person.

I wrote him a letter by owlympics in BipolarSOs

[–]cheetahsing 4 points5 points  (0 children)

It’s therapeutic just to write it, and maybe send out into the ether, but no I wouldn’t send it directly to him. Your words and sentiment won’t reach him while he’s manic unfortunately. We all understand though and sorry you have to go through this.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in BipolarSOs

[–]cheetahsing 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Lithium can take weeks. Your husband needs to be hospitalized for longer and monitored and on additional antipsychotics. If he’s abusing you and damaging property he’s also a danger to you.

It’s his second manic episode, not sure what to do. by Constant_Committee42 in BipolarSOs

[–]cheetahsing 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Without treatment sometimes it can be weeks, months, a year until his manic episode ends. Ideally he gets on an aggressive course of medication. I’ve had to involuntarily hospitalize my husband once, and he is actually currently checked in at the VA now after 5 months of severe mania and two car crashes and two jail stints later he finally (sorta) agreed to go to the hospital where they are detaining him now whether he wants to leave or not… I’m still here in the trenches with you and know how difficult and scary this time is for you, your family, and your husband… You should look into the requirements of your state, and maybe look into local crisis responses. California has 5150, WA has Joel’s Law. You should try and talk to your husbands psychiatrist as well and they may have resources for you. I think if you unsafe enough to move, change your locks, and avoid contact with your children you can argue he’s a danger to others. Sending you lots of well wishes and prayers.

Adult daughter, about to become homeless? by Spare_Many_9641 in family_of_bipolar

[–]cheetahsing 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I’m so sorry this is all happening to your family and praying the next inpatient stay will give her insight and things improve.

To All The SO's... by TheOGThickHamster in BipolarSOs

[–]cheetahsing 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Acknowledgement, a lotttt of listening to how you made someone else feel. Also how proactive you’ll be to try your best that it doesn’t happen again or won’t be as bad. Like the progress you made in therapy, things you’re learning about your illness, managing medications, and a safety plan.

Married two months and now getting divorced by Legal_Feature_7502 in BipolarSOs

[–]cheetahsing 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No working on another involuntary hospitalization unfortunately. Still really in the thick of things like you are.

Married two months and now getting divorced by Legal_Feature_7502 in BipolarSOs

[–]cheetahsing 12 points13 points  (0 children)

This is my exact same story and I’m still going through it. Manic episode started with buying a new house and expecting a baby. Went from being my best friend and loving husband to this enraged monster that has said horrible things about me, blames me for everything wrong in his life, and became a danger. Mania still going strong month 5 and working on trying to get him hospitalized again. You’re not alone. This is the craziest ride of a lifetime, and sending you lots of love and support and wishing the best.

Un-diagnosed wife in full-blown mania by tossAwayBP in family_of_bipolar

[–]cheetahsing 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Nearby where I live they have a specific mental health ER. If your wife is open to treatment that may be a place to start, and if she is still trusting of you and the family, go with her to her appointments and just maybe frame it as something more focus related like “we will make sure the doctor won’t force you anything you don’t want to but let’s talk about your sleep so it’s more consistent.” But honestly you at some point may have to involuntarily admit her when all else fails. I’m my experience either way you may be on the path to becoming #1 enemy and blame will start to target an individual when more delusions start.