good to know this
Candidpsychs! try it you might like it
I understand the power of now. Its like living with the flow and just accepting whatever is that is, even if it gets you angry or sad. Everything seems mystical and like a journey. Haha I like staying present as if I weren't controlling "myself". As if this being I were wasn't me and instead of calling it "me" I call it "it". "It is" and I take care of it almost as if I were the God. Giving "it" no value but sense, love and acceptance that will one day learn to heal others.
Thanks for your vids. I followed your advice on surrendering to the experiencing I was having and turned it into a daily meditation. My oh my wow how it helps haha I feel so good now, stress free and often feeling like Im floating watery in my body. I've retrieve the awareness/consciousness I had as a child and helped me understand the source of the problem. It is the egoic sense of self. I remember my first decision that threw me in that dark direction. I wanted to follow the "light" but didn't
You are nuts. You took David Hawkins idea and just raped it. This is absolutely not what he (or Steve Pavlina) talk about and you know it. This is disgusting, stupid and COMPLETELY wrong.
"...people with a higher level of consciousness are in a position where they can help support people with bipolar disorder so that they can heal". Are you implying that people with bipolar disorder are on a lower level of consciousness than those who do not suffer from it? Do I even really NEED to see part 2, knowing you believe that? Your understanding of "consciousness" is severely flawed. That's all I'll say until after I've FORCED myself to view part 2.
Such a non-video. So much non information. Wow. It was complaining about society and told nothing of how to live better with bipolar disorder. Just someone who likes to hear himself talk...
Anyone who reads this might find themselves exposed, naked, and critizised. If that had been reality, then things might have gotten complicated, maybe we would have ignored discussing these way to deep stuff and made a sandwich instead. But here, you can sit in front of the screen, observe every letter I have put down, and think about it as long as you want, then get back to me, or even make up a new video called "THE TRUTH". Google "THE TRUTH" and watch how many there are.
A: No one said that they can "heal" bi-polar disorder. They said that they can help you live -with- it. B: What about the stage where humanity out of nowhere become smarter than anyone else, knows the solution to every persons problem on this earth, while on the I.N.T.E.R.N.E.T where these smartasses easily can think about the answers for like, HOW EVER LONG THEY WANT, before they can make up a comeback? Is that stage 8?
is not lateral is not creative point is a point.
"My mind broke apart into a million pieces. I couldn't tell the difference between reality and fantasy."
Marcia
"I often have to step back and remind myself that I’m living with this condition and still experimenting with ways to manage and live with it."
Jessica Goldfinch
"In my early teens I began to really rebel – stealing, drinking, drugs etc. One minute I was completely hyped the next hating myself."
Jasmine
"Bipolar stories are invariably gut-wrenching litanies of loss and regret."
Sarah
"When I’m manic it feels like I just won money. It feels great. When I’m depressed, I feel like I have a draining flu that dwells in my emotions."
Candida Fink
"Manic-depression is a part of who I am, her voice is intertwined with my own; I have accepted that much."
Katherine Kizer
"My mind was a mess, a constant jumble of ideas which I couldn’t shut up."
Manoue
"I managed with some hard work and good support to get things under control, get a job and go back to college."
Anonymous
"The most important thing to have to deal with mental illness is to have at least one person who believes in you. I never had that until I met my therapist."
Anonymous
"It is sometimes very difficult to accept my husband’s emotions. Is he grumpy because he had not enough sleep or is he going down? What is normal?"
Est
"I feel useless. I used to be an active and happy person. But now all i do is want to sleep."
Noelle
"Because of bipolar disorder I have written more, drawn more, and simply made more. Because of it I care more."
Anonymous
"Normally I can get in trouble in autumn, but this year the trouble stays away and I still feel as normal as I did in the summer when the baby was born!"
Anonymous
"I can create amazing meals but wouldn't want to do it professionally, too much pressure, i get joy from taking my time, it's therapeutic too."
Fred
"I hate that feeling of "being well" I know it won't last."
Stan
"Sorry - sorry - sorry is a big part of my life, I say it every day and hate myself for what i have said or done to upset my family, friend or clients... I speak without thinking and still have not learned."
Deborah
"I think that self-harm and cyclothymia can be related. I mean, people who self-harm are usually depressed and may feel for some reason that they need to be punished."
Anonymous
"Escapism is important and nothing achieves such a medicinal self-forgetting than abandoning the self and imagining into the worlds and lives of imaginary others."
Robert
"You have to act as if you want to do daily activities. Doing daily activities give us a sense of mastery and that can help a lot with depression."
Marc
"I understand about being scared to take tablets - when they first gave them to me i was very nervous about taking them."
Samuel
"The 'real' you is a person with bipolar who is struggling but who is seeking help and support and that is something to be really proud of. None of us can say what we'd be like if we hadn't become ill - all we can do is work with what we have."
Elle
"I want people to know it gets better. Be honest with your doctors, reach out for friends and family, be your own advocate, fight for your wellness."
Amanda
"I am bipolar. My life is different. It has always been different to some extent. I am bipolar. My life is different. It has always been different to some extent."
Amy
"I quit taking the meds. A week later I saw the neurologist. The tests were inconclusive. From there I was sent to see yet another shrink. I was a mess."
Amy
"For the first time in my life I truly wanted to die. Other attempts had been cries for help."
Amy
"The thought of having a mental illness disturbed me deeply. I grieved. I cried."
Sheila
"I grew up in a family riveted with mental illness...I equated it with weakness. I grew up in a family riveted with mental illness...I equated it with weakness."
Sheila
"The doctors were telling me I, too, had a mental illness. I refused to believe it. I was too strong to succumb to such an illness."
Sheila
"Still, at the core of me, was the experience of being a survivor; I had always beaten the odds. But things did not get better; they got worse."
Sheila
"I'm still walking the fine line of good day-bad day but at least I'm walking, and knowing I'm not alone."
Kim B
"My teen years were a living hell and it felt as though they were wasted with doctors appointments, consuming dozens of medications, hospitalizations , and feelings of emptiness and worthlessness."
Anonymous
"Today, I haven’t done this well in a very long while or ever. I feel as though I can finally start to live and enjoy my life."
Anonymous
"I need to take time for myself to relax and unwind. It is really helpfull for me"
Jean
"Yes, I am a bipolar person, but I must remind sometimes that I am not my illness"
Kevin
"A big part of getting better is through acceptance and acceptance alone."
Anonymous
"It takes time and is hard, but stopping meds does NOT help. Eat healthfully and exercise vigorously when you have the energy. That has worked the best for me."
Alissa
"I do not know why, but I regulate my depression because of BD by touching water, at least, whenever going swimming is not possible. Splashing water over my face and head gives me an amazing awakening and a great sense of relief."
Phoebe
"I started to notice the symptoms when I was 5. I am 18 now and ready to graduate from High School to move onto college. My best advice is keep fighting; you are worth it."
Jessica
"If you are a patient of BD you should realize that you are given more energy and potential as compared to normal people and you should use that energy positively to live a very happy and successful life."
Anonymous
"Sometimes I feel in depression, but my friends and my family member's supports me to fight against my BD."
George
"I was diagnosed 5 years ago as being bipolar. I have never stopped taking my meds. I go to work every day. Never stop taking your meds. Always go for counseling, and get help whenever and wherever you can!"
Christine
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