That's not what I got out Gassy's story. I got a tourism mottoSo, in other words, "You're only a failure if you want to be."™
--Patrick
"Texas. Leave the basement behind"™
That's not what I got out Gassy's story. I got a tourism mottoSo, in other words, "You're only a failure if you want to be."™
--Patrick
"...unless there's a tornado, then get your ass back in that basement*."That's not what I got out Gassy's story. I got a tourism motto
"Texas. Leave the basement behind"™
It's the central theme to most of the gumption-producing works I know. Think and Grow Rich is basically a hundred or so pages of "never stop trying." Most addiction cessation plans boil down to "don't quit quitting." The advice you frequently get from friends/family/television/etc is "Just power through it until you come out the other side" or some such. So I guess the winning strategy is essentially "Don't succumb."Guess I'm a failure, then, because I don't know what else to be.
I feel your pain.=rocking back and forth in the fetal position=
Children learn by making mistakes, children learn by making mistakes, children learn by making mistakes,
children learn by making mistakes.....
I've seen SEVERAL doctors, counsellors, psychologists, and psychiatrists. They've all considered bipolar and ruled it out. My downs might be bad, but my ups aren't manic or hyperactive.Nick, honest to God man, you need to push your doctors about their "diagnosis." You show almost all the signs of Bipolar Disorder, Situational Depression is not what you keep showing us. You HAVE to push this to get the help you need. You've been running the "high" for the past month or so, and now you've crashed hard, not because of a change in your situation, but due to something else. Push it, fight for it, you have the capability and talent to succeed when you're riding that good spell, and the lows are destroying you. This isn't because of a failure on your part, but the failure of someone making the "easy" diagnosis instead of the one that you need to truly help you.
And I still say you need to push it. Just because it isn't the "worst" they've seen (and this is from experience with many that have gone through these things) doesn't mean it isn't. From what you share, and that's ALL I have to go on, and what you've said you're taking, the present diagnosis isn't right, you're still swinging wildly, you're not staying more centered and handling the lows better.I've seen SEVERAL doctors, counsellors, psychologists, and psychiatrists. They've all considered bipolar and ruled it out. My downs might be bad, but my ups aren't manic or hyperactive.
Oh, I'm sorry. I didn't realize you've spent hours speaking with me personally in your office and not knowing snippets of me and my life from reading posts on here. My mistake.And I still say you need to push it. Just because it isn't the "worst" they've seen (and this is from experience with many that have gone through these things) doesn't mean it isn't. From what you share, and that's ALL I have to go on, and what you've said you're taking, the present diagnosis isn't right, you're still swinging wildly, you're not staying more centered and handling the lows better.
I'm not saying this stuff to brow-beat you, or run you down, but because I do care about you, someone that is just a friend on the internet.
It's a nightmare but it's one exciting ride.=rocking back and forth in the fetal position=
Children learn by making mistakes, children learn by making mistakes, children learn by making mistakes,
children learn by making mistakes.....
I was on top of a ladder.....It's a nightmare but it's one exciting ride.
Unafraid although the danger just increased?I was on top of a ladder.....
Trapped.....Unafraid although the danger just increased?
One as tall as a mountain?Trapped.....
No just 12 ft up. Stuck holding something in place when I needed a tool.....30 minutes later they found it.One as tall as a mountain?
Screw your courage to the sticking place...No just 12 ft up. Stuck holding something in place when I needed a tool.....30 minutes later they found it.
That's worthy of a t-shirt.Screw your courage to the sticking place...
Take whatever booty you can find.That's worthy of a t-shirt.
Well, there's only so much fun I can get out of one song.
The trick is to want to hug them at least a tiny bit more than you want to kill them.No just 12 ft up. Stuck holding something in place when I needed a tool.....30 minutes later they found it.
I have the same philosophy with my doomweasels.The trick is to want to hug them at least a tiny bit more than you want to kill them.
Just don't hug them too hard.I have the same philosophy with my doomweasels.
First thing's first: hugs. Because I know that things are very hard for you, and I wish we could take all of that away. I can't imagine what it's like.Oh, I'm sorry. I didn't realize you've spent hours speaking with me personally in your office and not knowing snippets of me and my life from reading posts on here. My mistake.
I feel you, man, although for different reasons. People know they can't build or design a car without training. They can't paint a picture without practice. They can't perform surgery without years of study. But psychology? That's just intuitive. After all, everyone is a person. What more do you need to know? Why even offer a degree in it?I want people to stop trying to psychoanalyze me when professionals have been doing it for years. That's all. What do I tell my psychiatrist tomorrow?
"Yeah, these people on an internet who never met me in real life think your analysis of my condition is wrong."
The doctor needs the constellation of symptoms to make the diagnosis. The only way the novice has one over on the doctor is if they have withheld some information. To say nothing of a novice trying to counter-diagnose someone else that has already been to multiple doctors. What possible insight does that person have, with 0 medical training and 0 internal experience to draw on?I get what you're saying, but with medicine, the doctor isn't you. I don't think questioning a diagnosis means that you know more about medicine than the doctor does, but you do know more about your own body than the doctor does. If a car could say, hey that design's not working doc, that'd be awesome, in fact.
It is the diagnosis part that is, frankly, inappropriate. Sure, a novice friend can point something out. A patient can note something to tell their doctor. That is all information the doctor needs. But the doctor translates that information into a diagnosis using their training. A novice does that using nothing more than a recognition heuristicI'm not talking about a competition, though. Doctors aren't omniscient or infallible. The insight that novice has is observation under non-clinical conditions. I'm not trying to say a novice is right and a doctor is wrong. I'm saying the novice may have seen something the doctor didn't. Doctors revise diagnoses all the time as new information arises. What does it hurt to bring up concerns? If I went to a doctor and he told me I was cancer free, but my layperson friend spotted a weird lump on my back, I'd surely bring it up with the doctor.
It's also possible someone does withhold information without any intent. Maybe it's a group of friends who notice this and tell that friend, who brings it up with the professional, who says, "oh okay, that makes a difference">