The Effects on
Family and Friends ...the devastation that
bipolar disorder can cause
Supporting Someone with Bipolar - For Family and Friends
Mood disorders affect not only the lives of the victims themselves, but also
the entire social setting in which he/she moves; marriage, family, friends, job,
society at large. The root cause of all these impacts is the degraded ability
the victim has to "perform" in these different areas of his/her life. Thus a
seriously depressed person will become morose, incommunicative, withdrawn, and
unable to participate actively in what is going on. He/she will often become a
"wet blanket," sapping out whatever joy there might be in any occasion, and most
will agree that they don't enjoy having this person around. It therefore can
become a rather heavy burden upon family and friends to have to compensate, on
the one hand, for the loss of the "social" contribution that would customarily
be expected from the victim in the normal family setting, while at the same time
making an extra input of care, encouragement, supervision, and listening to
him/her. A manic person is the opposite; he/she will be obtrusive, aggressive,
argumentative, convinced of his/her infallibility, vain, arrogant, and quick to
give orders to others. Such people can be a real pain to be around. In the
family setting, a manic person is often rocking the boat, causing arguments,
being peremptory, making irresponsible expenditures and commitments, and
unilaterally breaking agreements.
It is impossible even to estimate the amount of emotional pain, stress and
loss family members experience in trying to deal with, ultimately to help, a
mentally ill person in the household. In many cases, their lives are seriously
disrupted, becoming a kind of living hell. Perhaps nothing is more awful than to
see, day in and day out, someone you love severely degraded by an illness you
don't fully understand, to do everything you can think of to help, and have none
of it work. And, in addition to have to deal with the stigma associated with
such an illness, not only by society at large, but also in your own mind,
however far back you may have pushed it. And thanks to the outrageously
inadequate framework provided in our society for mentally ill persons and their
families, you won't get much institutional help, short of hospitalization, which
ought to be only the last resort.
As the illness becomes more serious, degraded performance shades into
incapacity. Thus the depressive will linger in bed, begin to be routinely late
for work, be unable to make decisions or handle the workload on the job, and
eventually will be perceived as an unsatisfactory employee. Likewise the manic
will make quick but bad decisions based on little or no knowledge or data, will
take serious risks with business assets, become insubordinate or otherwise
disrupt the normal chain of command, and will be perceived as unreliable, though
energetic, and therefore an unacceptable risk.
The loss of a permanent, well-paying job is one of the worst things that can
happen to someone with mental illness. First, it means direct loss of income,
perhaps the main source of income in the family. Second, it may mean loss of
medical insurance, which may be badly needed in the weeks and months ahead.
Third, it means an unsatisfactory performance rating in one's personnel file,
which may come back to haunt the victim again and again as he/she tries to find
further employment. Fourth, it is a serious blow to the self-esteem of a
depressive, whereas a manic may not even consider the loss worth notice. Most
people do not have sufficient savings to face a prolonged period without income,
and available funds are usually quickly exhausted. All to quickly, the rent or
mortgage becomes overdue, and eviction follows. These difficulties are all
magnified and accelerated if the victim is the principal wage-earner for a
family. In such cases, the role and value of the victim as an effective spouse
or parent erodes quickly, and a separation or divorce often ensues. To make
matters worse, there is almost no effective public assistance available to a
seriously mentally ill person and his/her family. To obtain, for instance,
social security disability status can take months or even a year, and the
benefit, once it starts, is minimal - adequate if the ill person is the "guest"
of another family member, but totally inadequate for even bare survival of an
individual. This downward spiral is the reason so many mentally ill people end
up as street people in our big cities, unable to help themselves in any way that
will lead to improvement or remission of the illness.
It is impossible to even guess the tremendous amount of hardship, stress,
pain, and despair that our current system produces for people having the
misfortune to become mentally ill. One of the most important things that can be
done within the existing system is to learn how to recognize mood disorders at
an early age, before the grim scenario given above has a chance to unfold. Once
recognized, the illness urgently needs prompt, effective treatment. I stress
again that "mere" mood disorders can be life-threatening. If necessary, the victim should
be hospitalized, and thus placed in an environment where daily needs can be met,
safety can be assured, and optimal treatment given. The expense for such
treatment in a private hospital can be very large, and can rapidly exhaust one's
insurance. The quality of treatment in free public hospitals may be seriously
substandard.
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