- My name is [insert specific support/resource]
- and I was discovered [insert how/where/from whom support/resource was found]
- by my friend (you!) to help him/her [insert challenge you faced].
- Before my friend discovered me, he/she felt [insert your emotions]
- and hoped I could [insert expectation of support/resource]
- I provided my friend with [insert type of support/resource given] and [insert other type of support/resource given]
- My friend was happy with me because I [insert why support/resource was so great] and [insert other why support/resource was so great].
- They especially liked [insert best part about the support/resource]
- After receiving my support/resource, my friend [insert outcome/feeling/success].
My name is Community Services
and I was discovered through the county mental health board website
and I was discovered through the county mental health board website
by my friend Jrock to help him manage his bipolar disorder.
Before Jrock found me he had just about given up the fight, was very withdrawn...distant
Before Jrock found me he had just about given up the fight, was very withdrawn...distant
and hoped I could help Jrock take back his life and manage his bipolar.
I provided my friend with the counseling and medication he would need to fight his illness and become in control of his life.
My friend was happy with me because he was feeling more stable and beginning to feel there was hope for his future.
I provided my friend with the counseling and medication he would need to fight his illness and become in control of his life.
My friend was happy with me because he was feeling more stable and beginning to feel there was hope for his future.
He especially liked that he was starting to feel motivated again.
After receiving my support Jrock is starting to become more balanced and successfully managing his bipolar.
After receiving my support Jrock is starting to become more balanced and successfully managing his bipolar.
Jrock had never had counseling up until this point. He basically made a lot mistakes and beat himself up over them. When he started counseling he was very distant and withdrawn. He had a hard time opening up to me at first so I encouraged him to write everyday about what he did and how he handled things. After the first few weeks of journaling Jrock began to see and understand how being bipolar had affected him. Up until this point Jrock had a hard time admitting to himself that he could be bipolar. Jrock continued his journaling and we came up with a daily tracker that he used to record his mood, anxiety, mania, and anger. I would look through his mood tracker and we would discuss and come up with coping strategies Jrock could use if he felt like he was slipping in an area. For example, I worked with Jrock on deep breathing exercises he could use as a coping mechanism when he felt anger. The idea was that if he felt himself becoming angry he was to go to a quiet place and do some deep breathing to calm down and think about why he was getting angry.
Jrock also suffered from bulimia and a coping strategy we came up for that was that if after he ate he felt like had to purge he was supposed to go outside and take a brisk walk. The idea was to get him away from the negative situation and get him doing something positive which was walking off the food instead of purging it. Jrock had a few setbacks over the course of me counseling him but discovered that instead of beating himself up over them he should face the setback, deal with it, and move on with what he was doing. After about a year of counseling Jrock had become much more confident in his abilities, had gotten a new job, accepted his bipolar, and was taking his medication as prescribed. Jrock was smiling and seemed to be excited about life which was a complete turnaround. However, Jrock stopped coming to his sessions and we never heard from him again until three and a half years later.
It seems that Jrock’s complete turnaround drove him into a manic episode in which he abused drugs, drank a lot, spent way too much money, was promiscuous and began to not perform well at his job. I heard that he crashed after a few months into a deep depression, quit his job and had become very withdrawn and distant again. He told the intake specialist that he has had two more manic episodes in which he's been promiscuous, used drugs, and not slept for days on end. Jrock told the intake specialist that he's at the end of his rope and realizes he made a major mistake by ending his treatment three years ago. He said that he wants to pick up where he left off and get his life back in order. I can't wait to see Jrock again and provide him with the counseling and medication he needs to fight his bipolar with.
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