Bipolar Children

Eastern Wisdom

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... breathe

The Little Guide to Contentedness
by Leo
18 May 2012 at 1:31pm
‘He who is contented is rich.’ ~Lao Tzu Post written by Leo Babauta. There has been little in my life that has made as much an impact as learning to be content — with my life, where I am, what I’m doing, what I have, who I’m with, who I am. This little trick changes [...]
The 9-5 Guide to Staying Active
by guest
15 May 2012 at 9:00am
Editor’s note: This is a guest post from Matt Madeiro of Make Every Day Count. Let?s see if this rings any bells. When the clock hits 8, I sit. I plop back in my rolling chair, crack open the laptop on my desk, and spend the next nine hours with my butt glued firmly to [...]
Three Little Habits to Find Focus
by Leo
10 May 2012 at 11:42am
‘Distraction is the only thing that consoles us for miseries and yet it is itself the greatest of our miseries.’ ~Blaise Pascal Post written by Leo Babauta. I’ll be the first to admit that I fall victim to the trap of the Internet — a wonderful empowering tool that can fill your day with distractions, [...]
How to Live Well
by Leo
7 May 2012 at 1:59pm
‘Begin at once to live, and count each separate day as a separate life.’ ~Seneca Post written by Leo Babauta. I’m not a rich man, nor do I fly around the world and drink champagne with famous people in exotic locales, nor do I own a sports car or SUV or a yacht. And yet, [...]
What I?ve Learned About Learning
by Leo
3 May 2012 at 9:07am
‘We learn more by looking for the answer to a question and not finding it than we do from learning the answer itself.’ ~Lloyd Alexander Post written by Leo Babauta. I am a teacher and an avid learner, and I’m passionate about both. I’m a teacher because I help Eva homeschool our kids — OK, [...]
The 39th Lesson
by Leo
30 Apr 2012 at 9:05am
Post written by Leo Babauta. Today (April 30) is my 39th Un-un-birthday, and as usual, the day is a good day to pause and reflect. Last year I wrote 38 Life Lessons I?ve Learned in 38 Years, and people seemed to find some use in it. This year, I thought I’d share an additional lesson [...]
How to Fail at Habits
by Leo
24 Apr 2012 at 11:28am
Post written by Leo Babauta. Before I learned how to change habits, I was stuck. I kept trying to change various habits — running, eating healthier, waking earlier, getting out of debt, ending procrastination — and I kept failing. I got very good at failing, in fact. Looking back on those days, given the power [...]
Webinar: How I Used the Power of Bad Habits to Change My Life
by Leo
23 Apr 2012 at 8:00am
Post written by Leo Babauta. Yesterday I conducted a free webinar, “How I Used the Power of Bad Habits to Change My Life“, and the video is below. The webinar was held Mon. April 23), and in it I talked about my struggle with bad habits, why bad habits are so powerful, and how I [...]
Crazy Talk: The Do-What-You-Love Guide
by Leo
19 Apr 2012 at 11:36am
‘Everything you can imagine is real.’ ~Pablo Picasso Post written by Leo Babauta. When I wrote the first words of this blog, more than five years ago, I had no idea those few keystrokes would change my life. I thought I was doing nothing more than reflecting on the changes that had been happening in [...]
Why We Overplan
by Leo
17 Apr 2012 at 8:40am
‘A good traveler has no fixed plans, and is not intent on arriving.’ ~Lao Tzu Post written by Leo Babauta. There is something about my mind, and many people’s minds, that is overly optimistic. We think we can do so much each day, and so we overplan. We fill our plans with so much, confident [...]

 

 

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Bipolar Children

Here is your Thursday STORY on: ADAPTING TO CHANGE: Upon reflection we see many things that we could have done better; however, although we know this to be true we don't take any notice of the message it brings. Upon reflection implies that in time after an event you can see a better course of action. Why? Because we were more detached from the anguish than that moment had brought us. If only we could introduce that calmness at the time of the torment. Of course that would be a golden quality should we possess it. But it isn't beyond our reach. We first need to see the advantages of possessing this quality and then make a goal to climb in small steps to achieve it. Intuition is another sense we often pay no attention to. This sense brings us information that we later regret ignoring. The work here is not to establish a step by step plan to establish a goal, but to let go of other influences that take us away from the guidance our intuition is bringing us. Today's story draws a parallel with intuition, some guidance is offered and the listener pays no heed to. THE MOUNTAIN CLIMBER They tell the story of a mountain climber who, desperate to conquer the Aconcagua, initiated his climb after years of preparation. But he wanted the glory to himself; therefore, he went up alone. He started climbing and it was becoming later, and later. He did not prepare for camping, but decided to keep on going. Soon it got dark. Night fell with heaviness at a very high altitude. Visibility was zero. Everything was black. There was no moon, and the stars were covered by clouds. As he was climbing a ridge at about 100 meters from the top, he slipped and fell. Falling rapidly he could only see blotches of darkness that passed. He felt a terrible sensation of being sucked in by gravity. He kept falling... and in those anguishing moment's good and bad memories passed through his mind. He thought certainly he would die. But then he felt a jolt that almost tore him in half. Yes! Like any good mountain climber he had staked himself with a long rope tied to his waist. In those moments of stillness, suspended in the air he had no other choice but to shout: "HELP ME GOD. HELP ME!" All of a sudden he heard a deep voice from heaven... "What do you want me to do?" "SAVE ME." "Do you REALLY think that I can save you?" "OF COURSE MY GOD." "Then cut the rope that is holding you up." There was another moment of silence and stillness. The man just held tighter to the rope. The rescue team says that the next day they found a frozen mountain climber hanging strongly to a rope... TWO FEET OFF THE GROUND. (Unknown Author) QUOTE: "To find a fault may be easy; to do better may be difficult.' (Plutarch) [[ct]]: Bipolar Children

Beyond Nuclear, Bipolar Children and Their Families

9 Feb 2007 at 11:39pm


Rescuing Childhood: Understanding Bipolar Disorder in Children and Adolescents

18 Jun 2009 at 1:42pm


A letter of a bipolar child

7 Jun 2011 at 3:54pm



Next page: Happiness Professor


Bipolar Children News


Reader's view: Outrageous that Cravaack supports tax breaks for rich - Duluth...

19 May 2012 at 12:38am  I am a single mother of four wonderful children. Like most of us in the 8th Congressional ... My sons and I suffer from bipolar disorder, and Medicaid allows me to be able to afford my prescriptions that I otherwise wouldn?t be able to.

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Anybody with a bipolar child who doesn't sleep at night??
My 11 yr old daughter is bipolar. Diagnosed 3 yrs ago. She is awake all night...I mean all night. Doctor gave her geodon to sleep...she slept great. Doctor then moved out of state...new doctor said Geodon not good for kids...she was on too high of a dose, etc. So she put her on Clonodine. She is NOT sleeping....she is on .2mg. Falls right asleep, but doesnt stay asleep. Anybody have suggestions.... oh, we have tried melatonin...no help at all.

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How did you or your child act when they were a bipolar child or adolescent...?
I was wondering how yourself or child or teen acted when she was bipolar at the age. How fast was his/her cycles? etc.

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what to do when bipolar child harms my children?
A birthday party for my son turned in to a disaster when my six year old brother, recently diagnosed ADHD & Bipolar, threw a water bottle at my seven year old, throwing him to the ground and knocking out a tooth. Shortly before this incident, he tripped a kid while waiting in line to play a game, then shoved him to the ground. Although this was not the first time he has harmed one of my children, this was the first time that my husband and I blew a fuse. The comment "Be patient with him...he is sick" is ringing in my ear every time I see my children look at me in confusion after their "best bud" has knocked them down. Now my relationship with my parents is suffering. Where do I draw the line? How do I prevent keeping my children apart from my brother, who they love so much? Am I wrong for wanting to protect my children?

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