Empathetic
Guidelines
Supporting Someone with Bipolar - For Family and Friends
Don't criticize People struggling with any sort of mental illness
are very vulnerable, and cannot defend themselves against direct personal
attack. Try to be supportive, and keep negative or nagging remarks to an
absolute minimum. If there is one single standard to work for in your
relationship with a mentally ill person, it is to respect, and protect, their
shattered self-esteem.
Don't press, don't fight, don't punish "With this disease there is
no fighting. You may not fight. You just have to take it and take it calmly. And
remember to keep your voice down. Also punishment doesn't work with this
disease. Now that I have lived with a person with schizophrenia, it makes me
very upset when I see mental health workers try to correct their clients'
adverse behavior by punishment, because I know it doesn't work." - Joe Talbot,
quoted in The Family Face of Schizophrenia by Patricia Backlar
If you want to influence behavior effectively, the best thing to do is
ignore negative behavior as much as you can, and praise positive
behavior every chance you get Study after study shows that if you
"accentuate the positive" people will want to perform the behaviors that earn
them recognition and approval. Many reliable studies indicate that criticism,
conflict and emotional pressure are most highly related to relapse.
Learn to recognize and accept the primary symptoms, and the residual
symptoms, of a person's brain disorder Don't try to "jump start"
someone in a depression, or "shoot down" a person with mania, or argue with
schizophrenic delusions. Help them learn which of their behaviors are caused by
their illness. Tell them it's not their fault if they cannot get out of
depression, that they are not "terrible" for the things they did when they were
manic, etc. This kind of support relieves a lot of guilt and anxiety, even when
someone is still in denial.
Don't buy into the stigma all around you
HealthyPlace.com
Video
Ray Guevara on
Stigma -
Ray Guevara grew up in a conservative family and experienced
cultural barriers to seeking treatment for his bipolar disorder. Now, with his
illness and substance addictions under control, his experiences help him as an
outreach worker for the homeless mentally ill in California.
In this clip, Guevara discusses why stigma, shame and discrimination prevent an
estimated 80 percent of mentally ill individuals from seeking treatment.
watch with realplayer. video table of contents
here.
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People with mental illness
are not "bad," or ill because of some failure of character. Our family member is
not willfully trying to disgrace us, frustrate us and embarrass us. Their
behavior is not a reflection on our relationship, or our parenting. They are not
dedicated to undermining our dignity, or ruining our prestige and standing in
the community. They are simply ill. Stigma ia awfully hard for us to bear
in mental illness, but we certainly don't have to go along with it!
Lessen your demand for support from your ill relative People with
mental illness become very "self involved" when so much of their identity and
self-respect is at stake. They often cannot fulfill normal family roles. We are
all well advised to seek additional sources of emotional support for ourselves
when there is mental illness in the family. Then our loved ones can be who they
are, and they will feel less guilty for letting us down.
Having made these necessary allowances, treat people with mental illness,
day-to-day, just like anybody else Expect the "basics" we all require to
get along together, and set the same limits and expectations for reasonable
order that would exist if they were well. It is very reassuring to people with
mental illness when we make a clear distinction between them as a person,
and them as someone who has a problem with disordered behavior. All persons
require rules of conduct and cooperative standards to live by.
It is important to encourage independent behavior
Ask your ill
family member what they feel they are ready to do. Plan for progress in small
steps that have a better chance for success. Make short-term plans and goals and
be prepared for changes in directions, and retreats. Progress in mental illness
requires flexibility; it means giving up our zeal for progress measured by
normal standards. There is lots more danger in pushing than there is in
waiting. When they are ready, they move.
It doesn't help us to cling to the past, or dwell on "what might have
been" The best gift we can offer is to accept that mental illness is a
fact in the life of someone we love, and look ahead with hope to the future. It
is important to tell our family members that mental illness makes life
difficult, but not impossible. This is the only way it is now; things can be
better. People come out of these illnesses; people get better. Family members
can help keep the future alive; most people with mental illness do struggle on
and rebuild their lives.
Every time our relatives "get better" and show improvement, for them it
means that they are moving back into a risk position Being well
signals that they might be required to participate in the real world, and
this is a frightening prospect for the "shaky self." So, it is important for us
to be very patient in wellness, just as we are in illness. People recovering
from mental illness still have the awesome task of accepting what has happened
to them, finding new meaning in life, and constructing a way of living that
protects them from becoming ill again.
Empathy must also extend to each of us who struggle to understand and
encourage those we love who have mental illness. Remember, we can only
try to do our best. We cannot do any better than that. Some illness processes
get "stuck" no matter what we do to help. Brain disorders go through hard,
intractable periods where helping those who suffer them is often very difficult
to do. We can hope, we can assist, we can keep on trying, but we can't produce
miracles.
Families tell us that the most important "grace" one learns is the process
of caring for people with mental illness is forbearance, synonymous with
tolerance, charity, endurance and self-restraint Do not criticize
yourself if you sometimes cannot muster up these graces when you are feeling
frightened or frustrated. For all of us, coming to terms with changed life
circumstances in serious illness is a huge adjustment. We do know that
empathetic understanding will deepen and enrich our relationships with
our relative suffering from a mental illness.
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