Bipolar Depression
Depression does not mean that you are
sad or feeling blue. Depression is when your life takes a change and
you find things that were once easy for you become difficult.
Depression will cause a person to be unable to make simple decisions
and affect a person's entire life. Many people who have depression
will sleep a lot or they could have burst of emotions for no
apparent reason. They may just begin to cry or laugh and not be able
to stop. People who are bipolar tend to have mood swings often and
fluctuate in feelings through out the day.
One minute a person can be smiling and
the next they could be crying. Bipolar is associated with depression
because a person will be begin to drift off as a side effect of the
disorder. Being bipolar means, you can't control the way you feel
and the lack of control is what brings on the depression.
There are several changes in a person
that any loved one or close friend could pick up on. You will notice
a change in the person's active level as well as their energy level,
both depleting. A decreased level of energy is normal when it comes
to depression. It could start off because of the lack of options to
do something, but the body will begin to slow down and eventually a
feeling of great wear will begin to surface during daily activities.
Fatigue, of course, is a sign of depression. It has passed the
degree of decreased energy and the person now will feel physically
unable to do anything. Sleep worsens the condition and the daily
activities will seem overwhelming.
A person with bipolar depression may
have a good day and feel like they can run a marathon and then the
next day or even an hour later feel too weak to move. The body will
go to extremes and there is no middle ground when it comes to
bipolar depression. A person may experience a more serious symptom
like lethargy. The person won't be cationic, but they will just seem
uninterested in life or any activities.
The mind will begin to feel heavy and
the person's mental health could get worse if they reach a stage of
lethargy. Lethargy will take over a person's life and they will fail
to respond to their daily activities or responsibilities like work.
Another way to detect bipolar depression is if signs of insomnia or
hypersomnia is evident. Insomnia is the lack of sleep; a person will
find it difficult. Hypersomnia is the opposite and a person could
sleep more than twenty hours a day.
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