Chicago Tribune Feature – Published Sun., Aug. 26


No rhetoric; no sublime style; no lexicons or etymology.  Pure and simple disclosure of disquieting issues.

Please, REPOST THIS ON YOUR BLOG.  Personally, I prefer privacy over publicity; I exposed my life in the hope that the stigmas of mental illness, obesity, and homosexuality might be reconsidered to be human conditions worthy of respect and empathy.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/health/ct-met-bipolar-20120824,0,3948031.story

Bipolar II disorder: Another Chicagoan’s story

Like Jesse Jackson Jr., Harlan Didrickson has the illness and has had weight-loss surgery

 Harlan Didrickson poses outside his Rogers Park home. (Chris Walker, Tribune photo / August 17, 2012)
By Barbara Brotman, Chicago Tribune reporter, August 26, 2012
Harlan Didrickson was a model of middle-class stability.He lived with his partner of more than two decades in a handsome Victorian on a leafy North Side street. He worked as manager of executive and administrative services for a high-powered architectural firm, where he made hospitality and travel arrangements for large meetings and oversaw budgets that ran into millions of dollars.He was not the kind of person who would go to lunch with friends and come home having spent $4,500 on a puppy and a month of obedience training.

Or who would get up at 2 a.m., go to Dunkin’ Donuts, then drive to Indiana and back, snacking on Munchkins.

But that’s who he became.

Four years ago, his life was upended by bipolar II disorder, the same illness recently diagnosed in U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr.

This is not Jackson’s story. People with the disorder — nearly 6 million in the U.S. — have unique experiences with the illness, which cycles between moods of manic energy and deep depression.

“The symptoms of bipolar disorder can be very different from one person compared to another,” said Dr. John Zajecka, a psychiatrist with Rush University Medical Center who specializes in mood disorders.

Manic states leave some people euphoric, others irritable. “There are people who can function their whole lives in these hypomanic states,” though they may lose marriages, jobs and money, Zajecka said.

Depression, too, can appear in a variety of ways. Some sufferers stay in either mania or depression for decades; others cycle between them many times a day. And people respond differently to treatment.

But Didrickson’s struggle provides one look at how bipolar II disorder and its treatment can affect a life.

And he does have one key factor in common with Jackson. Like the congressman, Didrickson, 54, had weight-loss surgery before being diagnosed with bipolar. He had a gastric bypass procedure; Jackson had a duodenal switch.

It became a serious complication in his treatment. The weight-loss procedure, which causes the body to absorb fewer calories, prevented him from absorbing the full dose of his antidepressant medication.

Didrickson’s illness began when he started feeling extremely stressed at work. He considered himself skilled at his job but felt beleaguered by office politics.

“I felt as though I was fighting a lot of fights on different fronts in my life, and that I didn’t have the wherewithal, the energy,” he said. “I was profoundly unhappy.”

He changed jobs, twice. He still felt miserable. And he also felt trapped, having to do work he now found unbearably stressful.

More than 60 percent of people with bipolar engage in substance abuse as they try to self-medicate their inner pain. Didrickson was among them. At night he would wash down some hydrocodone, an opiate he had been prescribed for a back injury, with beer. He would stay up till 4 a.m. watching TV, then take Ambien to fall asleep.

“At 6 o’clock I woke up, got dressed and went to work. I was probably still high,” he said. “Then somewhere around noon, I would crash. I would go to the men’s bathroom, go sit on the toilet and fall asleep.”

His partner, Nick Harkin, a publicist with an entertainment and lifestyle marketing firm, had no idea how deeply troubled Didrickson had become.

But then Didrickson didn’t show up on time for a planned out-of-town getaway. When he arrived the next day, he was morose, secretive and exhausted. “It was a very abrupt shift,” Harkin said. “It was quite obvious that something was very seriously wrong.”

Didrickson was thinking of ending their relationship, he told Harkin. And he wanted to move to California’s Death Valley. He wanted to start a new life.

“I was falling apart,” Didrickson said. “It was this desperate: I will do anything to get out from under this pressure.’ It was like having a heart attack, and if you don’t get out from under it, it will kill you.”

Back home, he called a friend who had once been his therapist. She asked if he was suicidal.

“I was, like, ‘Of course I am. I think about it all the time,'” he said. “‘It’s the only comfort I have.'”

She told him to see a psychiatrist. He did, and was told he had depression — a common initial diagnosis for people with bipolar, who generally seek treatment during a depressed phase of the illness.

The antidepressant the doctor prescribed didn’t work. Didrickson developed memory problems, to the point where he forgot how to do simple tasks like using a phone.

“I could not take a shower, because I couldn’t recall the sequence of activities … turning on the water, stepping into the spray, getting wet, washing,” he said.

He lost 40 pounds and neglected bathing and grooming. And yet there were also times when Didrickson felt powerful, energetic, nearly like a superhero. He could do anything he wanted, no matter how dangerous or destructive, with no consequences.

He ran red lights. He drove the wrong way down one-way streets. “I felt like I was back to being in charge, like I was back to saying, ‘It’s going to go like this because I said so,'” Didrickson said. “I felt kind of emancipated.

“I thought, Wow, this (antidepressant) Paxil is really working.'”

But it wasn’t. A psychopharmacologist gave him a new diagnosis: bipolar II disorder, a form of bipolar disorder with less extreme mood swings.

His new doctor told him to stop self-medicating — Didrickson said he hasn’t had a drink or abused a drug since — and put him on a mood stabilizer. And then began the painstaking process of trying to find the right antidepressant: six weeks getting to a therapeutic amount of a drug, then six weeks being weaned off when it didn’t work, again and again.

“My symptoms came back. I just felt terrible,” he said.

He was still manic, once getting up at 4 a.m. to drive to Lake Shore Drive to look at newly fixed potholes. He spent money recklessly. He spent hours obsessing over the paper stock to use for custom stationery.

The manic states always turned dark, ending with him lashing out at people — usually Harkin.

“When I begin my mania, it’s a great party,” he said. “But when it gets to be months into it, it gets uglier and uglier and uglier, to the point where you really are a monster.

“Mania isn’t happy; mania is crazy,” he said.

No antidepressant worked. Then a friend with bipolar recommended Adderall, the stimulant often prescribed for attention deficit disorder.

His doctor prescribed a standard amount. It did nothing.

So Didrickson took another dose. And he felt a little better.

“I started to feel buoyant,” he said. “I always talk about feeling underwater. I felt like I was finally breaking the surface.”

He didn’t know why he needed a higher dose. But then he came upon online message board postings by people who had undergone gastric bypass surgery and then found that their antidepressant medicines stopped working.

The gastric bypass surgery he had undergone years earlier to lose weight, he concluded, was keeping his body from absorbing the medicine.

Indeed, Zajecka said, gastric bypass surgery can change how people absorb medicines given for bipolar disorder.

The Mayo Clinic statement announcing Jackson’s diagnosis also noted that the weight-loss surgery he had “can change how the body absorbs food, liquids, vitamins, nutrients and medications.”

Didrickson’s doctor would only marginally increase his dosage of the notoriously abused amphetamine. It wasn’t until he switched doctors because of a change in his health care coverage that he got what he found to be an effective dose.

His longtime internist, Dr. Eric Christoff, assistant professor of clinical medicine at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, gradually increased Didrickson’s dosage, with weekly appointments to check his blood pressure.

The depression lifted. He has been on the higher dosage for a year and a half.

“We have never seen any evidence of drug toxicity or high blood pressure,” Christoff said. “He’s really not absorbing much of any dose he’s taking.”

Many people with bipolar disorder are able to resume their previous lives.

“It’s one of the most treatable illnesses we have in medicine,” Zajecka said. “If it’s diagnosed properly and treated appropriately, there’s no reason they can’t get back to resuming a normal lifestyle and their normal goals in life.”

But Didrickson has been unable to go back to work and still has periods of depression and mania, though much milder ones. He manages the house, cooks and has taken up woodworking.

“Going out in the evening can be very, very, challenging for him,” Harkin said. “If we go to a concert or a dance performance and it’s too noisy, he’ll have to leave. If … there’s someone in a film who’s violent or cruel, that’s very upsetting to him too.”

“It’s nothing like I thought my life would be,” Didrickson said.

“The good thing, I guess, is that I don’t hold on to yesterdays,” he said. “That’s a blessing, I think, frankly. But I also don’t have tomorrow. My life isn’t about tomorrow.”

He has gone back to writing, which he did in college. He writes a blog about his experiences with bipolar, under the name T.M. Mulligan. The moniker stands for “Taking My Mulligan.”

“I’m having my do-over,” he said. “I’m taking the second chance.”

Copyright © 2012, Chicago Tribune

14 thoughts on “Chicago Tribune Feature – Published Sun., Aug. 26

    1. I think a hero is someone who does what is right for the moment. I felt naked telling a TV camera about my illness. I wasn’t sure how to handle the “fleeting moment of 15 minutes” of fame. “Being” true to oneself is the highest order any human can expect. I struggle with perception and blaming myself and others.

      I see your stance and hope your expression of yourself is helpful.

      I accept I have a physical disorder of the brain which can interfere with my personal life.

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  1. It’s funny how all these stories overlap. The reckless behaviour, the isolation. It all seems so familiar. I’ve reduced my social circle to a handful of people and if I can avoid leaving the house, I do. I can’t say it’s made me unhappy, though. It works for me. I enjoy the feeling of being insulated, that the outside world can’t interfere with me or force things upon me.
    To manage my mind I need to be able to filter the outside world.

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    1. I’m glad you told me about leaving your house. I thought I had the problem because of 20+ years of damaging corporate abuse and self-deprecating allegiance to assholes; I thought “I’m done living my life for others, I’m going to live life my way. And I don’t really like people.” But the way you put it, it sounds like it’s part of the condition. What did you think of the photo? Male model, maybe? 🙂 And thanks for reposting.

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      1. Personally, I think it’s a combination of perception and reality- in the sense that there’s a lot of awful stuff in the world and I don’t want to deal with awful stuff 😀

        I think that at this stage my perception is fairly accurate. I can recognize people who are destructive or have an agenda a mile away. In the old days I made it my responsibility to deal with them and even welcome them into my life. Now I put myself first.
        There are many down sides to mental issues, but there’s also the opportunity to strip life down to the bone. To cut through bourgeois convention and dissect our histories and relationship patterns. I’ve been able to separate myself from what the world thinks is good and what I know is good for me.

        The photo is excellent 😉

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  2. A few years ago I dealt with postpartum psychosis and although not the same as bipolar disorder, I can empathize with you. I just finished reading the article in which you were featured and am proud of you for sharing your story. Hopefully it will continue chipping away the stigma associated with mental illness, encouraging those who suffer to seek treatment and enabling friends and family to learn more about how to better support loved ones. Thanks for your bravery and courage in sharing – I’m certain there will be people who read this story and seek the help they need because you decided to share. Best wishes as you manage your condition and may you find the balance and happiness in life that you deserve.

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  3. A great story! My son is bipolar and unmedicated. He is learning to cope with the mania, but the depression is another story. Having suffered from depression many years, I can sympathize with that aspect. He also self medicated (alcohol and any drugs he could get hold of). It’s a very familiar story.

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    1. Dear AppletonAvenue, first, thank you for taking the time to visit my blog and read the Tribune article. Secondly, thank you for your response. When I read your response I was quite moved by your son’s struggle. I know that there are many, many days in which the only thing I can do is hold on. And not to some abstract hope people promise is at hand. I hold on simply because the only other option is, well, permanent. While things may never be the same for your son, I have rediscovered compassion and kindness (both in accepting it and in giving it). If I can help in any other way, please feel free to contact me.

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      1. You are so kind to offer. Only someone who really knows can offer that type of support. Even mine, similar, is still not the same. I’ve often told him that life was hard; it didn’t get easier, but dealing with it does. And that in the end there are only two options in life; to go on–or not. As I said he is making progress. Perhaps compassion and kindness are coming next.

        I wish you continued success in your journey.

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  4. There are many high functioning bi-polar writers. You are lucky to have had your break late in life yet the suffering is no less real. I imagine you not as the GQ candy of the month but a person who wears a t-shirt, brown hat, XXX pants and a walking cane.

    Personally, I’ve not experienced the wild spending sprees, the debt (although my father helped me with thousands of dollars of credit card bills) but have stayed hidden most of my life. Because my father was a professional with a corporation but came from a small town we lived as middle class. Rolodex, special writing instruments, the best of every thing were in reach but considered unimportant.

    What would my life be, had I been more self promoting, and trying to live an image of a man (my father) who wasn’t there other than taking space?

    Although we may have nothing in common, except our humanity and the challenges of our gene pool, I like T.M. Mulligan and his writer.

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