Short Answer
Bipolar And Adhd is a complex condition affecting emotional regulation, often misunderstood or minimized. It involves real neurological and physiological changes that impact daily functioning.
What This Means
Living with bipolar and adhd means your emotional experience exists outside typical bounds—not because you are weak, but because your nervous system operates on different parameters. The highs may feel transcendent; the lows may feel annihilating. Neither represents your true character.
This is not about choice or attitude. It is about neurobiology, environmental sensitivity, and often, unprocessed trauma that shaped your stress response systems early in life.
Why This Happens
Research from Van der Kolk (2014) and the Polyvagal Theory (Porges, 2011) shows that mood dysregulation often stems from early attachment trauma and nervous system adaptations. When caregivers were inconsistent or unavailable, developing brains learned that emotional safety is precarious.
The ACE Study (Felitti, 1998) demonstrated clear links between childhood adversity and mood disorders later in life. Your brain adapted to survive—you learned vigilance, emotional extremes, or shutdown as protective strategies.
What Can Help
- Mood Tracking: Patterns reveal triggers and early warning signs. Data reduces shame.
- Sleep Hygiene: Sleep disruption is both symptom and trigger. Protect your circadian rhythm.
- Somatic Regulation: Your body holds the stress. Breathwork, grounding, and movement help.
- Medication Support: When appropriate, psychiatric medication can provide stability.
- Therapy Integration: DBT, CBT, or trauma-focused therapy addresses root patterns.
When to Seek Support
If your experience significantly interferes with relationships, work, or daily functioning, professional support is warranted. For immediate crisis, contact 988 or text 741741.
A trauma-informed therapist can help address the root nervous system patterns while building sustainable coping strategies.
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Van der Kolk, B. (2014). The Body Keeps the Score. Viking.
View on PubMed
Porges, S. W. (2011). The Polyvagal Theory. Norton.
Google Scholar
Felitti, V. J., et al. (1998). Relationship of childhood abuse and household dysfunction to many leading causes of death in adults.
American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 14(4), 245-258.
CDC ACE Study