Anonymous wrote:I'd be depressed too if my spouse was micromanaging me the way you're micromanaging him. Geez.
Signed,
A woman
Anonymous wrote:Medications and especially weed are a crutch. He needs to get his ass to the gym and lift. Best thing you can do is go with him to the gym to encourage him to do it.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you sound incredibly supportive and he's fortunate. Please don't forget that YOU are a person in this family too, with your needs. At the risk of sounding cold (but it's easy for me to do since I'm a stranger) but I think you might want to start telling him he needs to commit to getting a handle on his issues rather than burdening you with them and seeking permission to do things he knows aren't in his or his family's best interest, because your support tank is running dry and your resentment tank is starting to fill. And you mention that you have kids?! Kids pick up on more than we think. Have you checked in with them about their joyless, do nothing father? Separation might be best for everyone involved.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you sound incredibly supportive and he's fortunate. Please don't forget that YOU are a person in this family too, with your needs. At the risk of sounding cold (but it's easy for me to do since I'm a stranger) but I think you might want to start telling him he needs to commit to getting a handle on his issues rather than burdening you with them and seeking permission to do things he knows aren't in his or his family's best interest, because your support tank is running dry and your resentment tank is starting to fill. And you mention that you have kids?! Kids pick up on more than we think. Have you checked in with them about their joyless, do nothing father? Separation might be best for everyone involved.
I wouldn’t say he’s joyless around the kids. It’s more like, I’m trying to be supportive by letting him sleep in, which means I care for the kids all morning. Which is fine once in awhile, but every weekend is wearing on me. Anonymous wrote:
Don’t fall into the weed trap- small amounts may mimic an anti-depressant but large amounts may worsen depression. Why did he originally stop taking anti-depressants? I would insist on a psychiatrist and anti-depressants, once he is stabilized let him discuss marijuana use with his doctor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Don’t fall into the weed trap- small amounts may mimic an anti-depressant but large amounts may worsen depression. Why did he originally stop taking anti-depressants? I would insist on a psychiatrist and anti-depressants, once he is stabilized let him discuss marijuana use with his doctor.
OP. I completely forgot to mention that. He is still on his anti depressants, but has been talking about how he misses the “highs” of his more manic periods. He recognizes that the medication levels him out overall so his lows aren’t as bad but he wants the highs again. This is very concerning to me, and I’m worried he’ll go off his meds without the guidance of a doctor.
He sure sounds bipolar to me. There's bipolar 1, with severe manic periods, and bipolar 2, with less severe manic periods. And to confuse matters more, my ex-H was diagnosed with bipolar 2 even though he never had "up" periods, and it was explained to is that he experienced dysphoria instead of euphoria, so instead of feeling happy, his manic periods were marked by agitation, anxiety, and irritability. So he sang between that and depression, which all just looked like depression really. Anyway, my point is, he probably needs a cocktail of meds including a mood stabilizer.
OP. This is interesting. The weird thing is I’ve never really noticed any swings. He’s never irritated or anxious. I’ve never even seen him angry. All I noticed is that once in awhile he’ll get really into a hobby, and once in awhile he’ll spend more time sleeping and will give up things like working out. I didn’t even know he was feeling swings until he told me.
I wonder if part of the problem is he has only seen a GP for anti depressants. He should probably see an actual psychiatrist instead.
I have bipolar 2 disorder. I see Dr. Mehra who has offices in Alexandria and Fairfax (I think?). She is brusque and runs a skeleton practice but has been wonderful for me. The great thing about this illness is that there is one medication for it—Lamictal—that is almost always very effective. And it has a generic so it’s cheap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Medications and especially weed are a crutch. He needs to get his ass to the gym and lift. Best thing you can do is go with him to the gym to encourage him to do it.
We have three kids, I can’t go to the gym with him.
Also, as someone who has lifted most of her adult life, I think this is very dangerous advice. Medication does have very real benefits, and a barbell doesn’t replace them. Some of the biggest meat heads I’ve known also suffer from mental illness. One of my good friends is a leading expert in the strength and conditioning field and he struggles with depression.
OK....but is he exercising? At all? he needs to be running, walking, doing yoga, something...ANYTHING. So maybe don't nitpick the well-intended advice by chastising strangers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Don’t fall into the weed trap- small amounts may mimic an anti-depressant but large amounts may worsen depression. Why did he originally stop taking anti-depressants? I would insist on a psychiatrist and anti-depressants, once he is stabilized let him discuss marijuana use with his doctor.
OP. I completely forgot to mention that. He is still on his anti depressants, but has been talking about how he misses the “highs” of his more manic periods. He recognizes that the medication levels him out overall so his lows aren’t as bad but he wants the highs again. This is very concerning to me, and I’m worried he’ll go off his meds without the guidance of a doctor.
He sure sounds bipolar to me. There's bipolar 1, with severe manic periods, and bipolar 2, with less severe manic periods. And to confuse matters more, my ex-H was diagnosed with bipolar 2 even though he never had "up" periods, and it was explained to is that he experienced dysphoria instead of euphoria, so instead of feeling happy, his manic periods were marked by agitation, anxiety, and irritability. So he sang between that and depression, which all just looked like depression really. Anyway, my point is, he probably needs a cocktail of meds including a mood stabilizer.
OP. This is interesting. The weird thing is I’ve never really noticed any swings. He’s never irritated or anxious. I’ve never even seen him angry. All I noticed is that once in awhile he’ll get really into a hobby, and once in awhile he’ll spend more time sleeping and will give up things like working out. I didn’t even know he was feeling swings until he told me.
I wonder if part of the problem is he has only seen a GP for anti depressants. He should probably see an actual psychiatrist instead.
I have bipolar 2 disorder. I see Dr. Mehra who has offices in Alexandria and Fairfax (I think?). She is brusque and runs a skeleton practice but has been wonderful for me. The great thing about this illness is that there is one medication for it—Lamictal—that is almost always very effective. And it has a generic so it’s cheap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Medications and especially weed are a crutch. He needs to get his ass to the gym and lift. Best thing you can do is go with him to the gym to encourage him to do it.
We have three kids, I can’t go to the gym with him.
Also, as someone who has lifted most of her adult life, I think this is very dangerous advice. Medication does have very real benefits, and a barbell doesn’t replace them. Some of the biggest meat heads I’ve known also suffer from mental illness. One of my good friends is a leading expert in the strength and conditioning field and he struggles with depression.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Don’t fall into the weed trap- small amounts may mimic an anti-depressant but large amounts may worsen depression. Why did he originally stop taking anti-depressants? I would insist on a psychiatrist and anti-depressants, once he is stabilized let him discuss marijuana use with his doctor.
OP. I completely forgot to mention that. He is still on his anti depressants, but has been talking about how he misses the “highs” of his more manic periods. He recognizes that the medication levels him out overall so his lows aren’t as bad but he wants the highs again. This is very concerning to me, and I’m worried he’ll go off his meds without the guidance of a doctor.
He sure sounds bipolar to me. There's bipolar 1, with severe manic periods, and bipolar 2, with less severe manic periods. And to confuse matters more, my ex-H was diagnosed with bipolar 2 even though he never had "up" periods, and it was explained to is that he experienced dysphoria instead of euphoria, so instead of feeling happy, his manic periods were marked by agitation, anxiety, and irritability. So he sang between that and depression, which all just looked like depression really. Anyway, my point is, he probably needs a cocktail of meds including a mood stabilizer.
OP. This is interesting. The weird thing is I’ve never really noticed any swings. He’s never irritated or anxious. I’ve never even seen him angry. All I noticed is that once in awhile he’ll get really into a hobby, and once in awhile he’ll spend more time sleeping and will give up things like working out. I didn’t even know he was feeling swings until he told me.
I wonder if part of the problem is he has only seen a GP for anti depressants. He should probably see an actual psychiatrist instead.
Anonymous wrote:Medications and especially weed are a crutch. He needs to get his ass to the gym and lift. Best thing you can do is go with him to the gym to encourage him to do it.
Anonymous wrote:You sound incredibly supportive and levelheaded. Standard care for depression is talk therapy/cbt and possible treatment with SSRIs (antidepressants) especially if this is a relapse and drugs were helpful before. He needs to see a counselor and a psychiatrist. You can help him make appointments if he’s struggling that profoundly. He seems to be leaning on you a lot and looking to you for guidance. So you might as well counter his request for your permission to do weed with support instead for proper care.
I say this as a person with recurrent depression myself who is currently leaning hard on my partner. But also doing the work with weekly therapy and med management with a psychiatric nurse practitioner.