NEW DEGREE PRESS
COPYRIGHT 2021 KATE ARREDONDO
All rights reserved.
FINDING THE ALPENGLOW
MY JOURNEY TO STABILITY WHILE LIVING WITH BIPOLAR DISORDER
ISBN 978-1-63730-705-2 Paperback
978-1-63730-796-0 Kindle Ebook
979-8-88504-010-5 Ebook
FINDING THE ALPENGLOW
To my parents, for loving me no matter what.
To my husband, for being my best friend and my rock.
To my daughter, for giving me unwavering strength.
To my brother, for saving me.
To my sister, for always listening to me.
To anyone with a mental illness, for enduring.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER 1.
CHAPTER 2.
CHAPTER 3.
CHAPTER 4.
CHAPTER 5.
CHAPTER 6.
CHAPTER 7.
CHAPTER 8.
CHAPTER 9.
CHAPTER 10.
CHAPTER 11.
CHAPTER 12.
CHAPTER 13.
CHAPTER 14.
INTRODUCTION
I was driving to work when the panic hit. My lips curled down in despair, quivering. Tears welled in my eyes, and suddenly my breath was short and troubled. Snot began filling my sinuses and running down my nose. I was gasping for air.
I was sleep deprived. I was in survival mode. I was tapering down from exclusively pumping for my thirteen-month-old daughter. All the while, surviving in a job I felt had no purpose.
It had been almost ten years since I had an attack like this. I called my mom, one of two people who can calm me down when I lose control. She always listenswhile holding space for me to recognize the flawed thinking that wound me up in the first place. After I was able to finally regain my breath on the phone with her, we agreed it was time to reach out to my psychiatrist and update her on my panic attack.
I had been off my medications for bipolar disorder for over two years, a decision I made with both my psychiatrist and my husband so that we could start our family.
My medication had a risk for congenital disabilities and over the last five years, I had been able to taper my therapeutic dose down by half with no major episodes. So, when my husband and I met with my psychiatrist before trying to have a baby, she felt confident that with the help of pregnancy hormones, I could completely taper off my medications over six months and still be able to maintain my mental stability during pregnancy and breastfeeding. That is the beautiful thing about a womans body: it will do anything in its power to protect the baby.
While the pregnancy hormones had been sufficient in keeping me stable over the last twenty-two months, my levels were returning to normal as I weaned from breast pumping. I wasnt utilizing the few coping mechanisms I knew, let alone making a plan for the transition to life unmedicated. All I knew was that I was desperate not to go back on my medications. I had come this far and refused to accept that I was not emotionally strong enough (my ever-present gremlin message) to control my mood without medication.
The Shift
Over the next three years, I would discover simple yet powerful resources and utilize them to bring balance to my life. I was embarking on a spiritual awakening, a journey that would bring a complete shift in my mindset and allow me to go from coping to thriving with my illness.
The Centers for Disease Control and Preventions website on mental health states that more than 264 million people suffer from depression globally, with eight hundred thousand dying from suicide each year. In our country alone, one in every twenty-five Americans lives with a serious mental illness, such as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or major depression. Additionally, it was found that 1 in every 5 Americans will experience a mental illness each year, (CDC, 2021).
Whats even more alarming, though, is the stigma around mental illness, which can make it harder for those suffering to reach out for help. Our society superficially considers people with mental illnesses as crazy. Common stereotypes make it seem like someone with a mental illness will never be stable, successful, happy, or have a family of their own.
When I first began struggling with my mental illness in high school, I fell victim to these fears. I did not want to be seen as crazy, so I kept my dark thoughts to myself and made excuses for why I could not go out with my friends. I quit the sports I loved and hid in my bedroom. I felt unequipped to handle the mental marathon that comes with having a mental illness, and the self-induced isolation further intensified my suffering.
After that fateful panic attack driving to work, I went back to my psychiatrist and started learning about meditation and mindfulness. In my search for answers on living a more purposeful life, I discovered an interview with Nik Wood on the podcast, Energy Matters, that introduced me to life coaching. It inspired me to become a certified professional coach. My yearlong coach training program at the Institute for Professional Excellence in Coaching (iPEC) allowed me to connect with my true self and taught me how to move from a victim mindset to one of endless opportunities.
At the time of writing, it has been three and a half years since I first learned about meditation from my psychiatrist after my panic attack. My mental illness is no longer my weakness; it is my superpower. It has given me the awareness, courage, and strength to weather any storm. I understand now that I am in control. My thoughts do not define me; my mood does not define me. I have learned many incredible life lessons from my spiritual journey. They have helped me go from merely coping to fully thriving in my life. I want to share my experiences with you so that you, too, may develop hope that life can, and will, be better.
Your life matters. You can choose to liveno matter how bad you feel or how much you do not want to at this moment in time. You are worth it. You have the power to thrive in your life. Every second that passes is an opportunity for a restart. We only ever have the present moment to choose our new course.
Medication and therapy will always play a vital role in your mental health journey. I will guide you through the experiences and lessons that I have learned to help keep myself grounded and maintain long-lasting mental stability. By nourishing your mind, body, and soul, you can develop your own unique recipe for stability.
My mental health recipe is a mixture of things everyone has available for use at any time, in varying degrees, depending on the moment. The good news is that the tools are simple. We all have exceptional minds that give us the ability to reframe our thoughts and gain control of our struggles with mental health in order to find our purpose in life.
Your present circumstances do not determine where you can go; they merely determine where you start.
Nido Qubein
CHAPTER 1
HOW I GOT HERE
The only journey is the journey within.
Rainer Maria Rilke
Middle school was the best time of my life, said no one ever. That is where my mental health journey began, sixth grade, to be exact.
Up until that point, I had attended a small private school in Austin, Texas called Kirby Hall, from kindergarten through to fifth grade. My class had consisted of thirteen classmates from various backgrounds, races, and religions. I had classmates from Africa, Iran, and England and teachers from Spain and Germany. I had no concept that the color of someones skin meant anything different about them at all. We were all extremely close and had been secluded from societal pressures in our blue and white uniforms and safely kept in a three-story, red-brick bubble.