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How To Distinguish Bipolar Disorder Behavior



Many people who find themselves suffering from severe mood swings, sudden shifts in activity levels, extreme feelings of ecstasy and equally extreme feelings of depression often wonder whether or not these conditions are normal or they’re manifestations of the more serious ailment called bipolar disorder. Indeed, bipolar disorder behavior can be quite ambiguous. Often they can be a sign of something that is ingrained in our humanity, or they can be symptoms of an abnormal behavior crying out for treatment.
Bipolar Disorder
So how can you tell if what you're dealing with is bipolar disorder?

Here’s a simple test: is there a reason?


Usual mood swings, depressions, happiness or tiredness are experienced because they’re caused by one factor or another. You may be depressed because someone hurt your feelings, for example. You may feel happy because someone complimented you. You may lose all your energy because of the efforts you’ve exerted for a particular task. Regardless, whatever has caused your mood swing, the integral factor is: there’s a cause.

Bipolar disorder behavior, on the other hand, is experienced by the person for no particular reason, it just happens. The subject may be feeling extremely happy one minute, and completely depressed the next. He may feel hyperactive in the morning, and totally fatigued by midday. He may be extremely happy at the beginning of the conversation, and all of a sudden, he'll become out of control angry. The thing is, all of these are experienced without reason for their sudden eruption.

So, if you're in the middle of an emotional upheaval that you know will result in miserable feelings, ask yourself: is there a reason for what I’m experiencing?

If there is a reason, then you can stop worrying because this is normal — it's just a part of the human condition. We feel emotions because we're alive. We feel pain when we're poked. We feel joy when someone does us a good deed. We feel anger when provoked. It's all a natural cycle.

If there are no reasons for the feelings you're going through, then chances are you may be experiencing bipolar disorder behavior, which is something pathological, and it's something that will require treatment. However, you don't have to go through it alone because there are many people who are willing to help. However, you must first realize that it's up to you to acknowledge the existence of the problem. You must be the one to take that first step towards a solution.




 




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