A list of bipolar triggers and how triggers affect mood stability associated with bipolar disorder.
Gold Standard for Treating Bipolar Disorder (part 16)
Bipolar triggers are behaviors and outside events that lead to bipolar disorder symptoms. As you probably know from experience, these triggers can be positive or negative. You often have control of them, but some are just part of everyday life.
The more you control your bipolar triggers, the greater chance you have of finding stability. This can lead to a significant reduction in medications as well as more of an ability to work and maintain stable relationships. It can’t be stressed enough that triggers are the main environmental cause of bipolar disorder mood swings and must be monitored and reduced as much as possible. You can note all triggers on your mood swing chart as related to a particular mood swing.
Triggers come in many forms- from the positive, such as:
- a new relationship
- the birth of a child
- a promotion at work
- graduating from college
- an exciting vacation
to the negative:
- sleep changes due to work schedules
- troublesome relationships
- a death in the family
- or most significantly, drug and alcohol abuse. Of all of the triggers, these two are the most detrimental.
Common Bipolar Disorder Triggers
- Alcohol and drug abuse
- Argumentative, negative and aggressive people (if this describes you, reducing your bipolar disorder symptoms can help with the problem)
- Stressful work- especially work with constantly changing hours
- Travel – especially travel with time zone changes
- Relationship problems
- Non-supportive family members and friends
- Excessive media exposure to stressful world events
- Social isolation
- Medication side-effects
next: My Thoughts are Terrible. What Can I Do? (part 17)