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Coping with Bipolar Disorder & Depression Around the Holidays

The holidays bring a special challenge to people who live with bipolar disorder or depression. The challenge is a combination of the increased stress that the holiday season often brings along with the symptoms — such as mania or depression — of these disorders. As a result, people who live with bipolar disorder or those who live with depression might dread the upcoming holidays.

Whether you’re stressing about money, family issues, remembering a loss or loved one who’s gone, or just feeling lonely, there’s a few things you can do to help better cope around the holidays.

A person who lives with bipolar disorder typically has a treatment plan that includes medication that helps prevent or reduce the cycling that is a hallmark of the condition. And a person with depression’s treatment plan often includes an antidepressant medication to help keep their mood elevated. Nearly everyone with bipolar disorder or depression also benefits from seeing a psychotherapist on a regular basis — especially at this time of the year.

Stress is a common trigger that can make a person’s mood worsen, even while they’re on medication. The holidays bring most of us additional levels of stress, even if we’re generally feeling good about them.1

6 Tips to Help with Bipolar Disorder & Depression

These tips may help you better deal with the challenges around the holidays.

1. Don’t hibernate or isolate.

One coping mechanism many people resort to when under stress is to go underground — to hibernate or isolate themselves from others and social situations. While this may help deal with the stress and anxiety surrounding being social when you don’t really feel like it, it contributes significantly to feelings of loneliness.

2. Keep spending — and comparisons — in check.

Social media sites like Facebook or Instagram are wonderful for keeping up on your friends and family. But they can also make us feel badly about ourselves when used as a comparison tool. “Oh look, Amy is buying a new laptop for their daughter… I wonder how that’s going to make my daughter (her friend) feel since she’s still using one that’s 3 years old…” Get off that hamster wheel and avoid social media if you find it’s making you feel bad about yourself. You can’t spend yourself into feeling better (despite what marketing tries to convince us otherwise).

3. Stick to your treatment routine — and up it, if need be.

A person with bipolar disorder at this time of the year may be feeling like they’ve been doing so well, the last thing they need to worry about is taking their prescription as directed. And a person with depression may feel like, “Well, the meds don’t seem to be working as well as they once did, so why continue taking them?”

A desire to make a significant change to one’s treatment plan during a hectic time of the year is usually unwise. Stick to your existing treatment plan and think about adding to it temporarily — like with an additional support group meeting or even another therapy session — to help you cope.

4. Plan your holidays with a little forethought — don’t try and do it all.

Too many of us try and do it all around the holidays, and when grappling with a mood disorder, this can be an overwhelming combination.

Many of us feel buffeted around by the holidays, going from one thing to another and feeling like we have very little choice in the matter. The truth, however, is that we very much have a choice — we just go along with things the way they always are because that’s what’s easiest. But it may not be what’s best for us. It may help to sit down with your calendar and your holidays out, choosing the things you want to do and go to and saying “no” to things you really don’t want to do this year.

5. Remember moderation.

It feels good to let go sometimes, especially if you have bipolar disorder and remember some aspects of a manic phase that were positive (while conveniently forgetting the less positive aspects). Holiday times might seem like a good time to let loose and over-indulge, whether it be in eating, drinking, buying presents, or consuming social media. But overdoing it in any area of our lives rarely results in anything positive. Resist the temptation to overdo it, and remember moderation in all things.

6. Rest, forgive, take responsibility, and give thanks.

Throughout it all, remember the holidays are a time to celebrate life, friendships, family, and being thankful just for being alive. It’s a good time to make amends if need be (with a friend or family member), take responsibility for your own behaviors, and try and be more mindful of the many moments you are living. We take for granted that we will always get more of them with all the same people, but that won’t always be the case.

Keep your expectations minimal and well in check and you may find this to be one of your better holidays. And remember, one of the best things you can do is to stick to your routines and don’t try to change anything big.

Happy holidays!

 

For further reading

Coping With Depression During The Holiday Season

9 Tips to Cope with Holiday Depression

Coping With Loneliness During the Holidays

5 Holiday Tips for Managing Bipolar Disorder

5 Positive Things about the Holidays and Bipolar Disorder

Our Complete Coping with the Holidays Guide

Footnotes:

  1. Not all stress comes from bad events. For instance, marriage is one of the happiest moments in a person’s life — but also one of the most stressful.


Source: psychcenteral