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6 votes
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Two decades of Alzheimer's research may be based on deliberate fraud
31 votes -
Is your smartphone ruining your memory? A special report on the rise of ‘digital amnesia’
12 votes -
Where a thousand digital eyes keep watch over the elderly
3 votes -
I am a transwoman, I am in the closet and I am not coming out
22 votes -
How mental health became a social media minefield
13 votes -
Food, beauty, mind
6 votes -
Experimental compound revives memory in Alzheimer’s disease mice
11 votes -
Japan’s elderly online shoppers are running into trouble
7 votes -
Man recreates supermarket at home for 87-year-old mother battling dementia
6 votes -
The number of teenagers registered as girls at birth who have been diagnosed with gender dysphoria has increased by almost 1,500 percent in ten years in Sweden
10 votes -
How an Alzheimer’s ‘cabal’ thwarted progress toward a cure
9 votes -
Dissociative Identity simulation
6 votes -
IKEA and the Queen of Sweden are designing homes for people with dementia
5 votes -
Pfizer had clues its blockbuster drug could prevent Alzheimer’s. Why didn’t it tell the world?
8 votes -
In a Colombian family’s dementia, a journey through race and history
3 votes -
David Milch’s third act
4 votes -
Thirty essential ideas you should know about ADHD
7 votes -
Younger longer - With greater longevity, the quest to avoid the infirmities of aging is more urgent than ever
7 votes -
Getting diagnosed with ADHD at 25 changed everything
12 votes -
Tumblr helped me plan my eating disorder. Then it helped me heal.
10 votes -
Gender dysphoria isn’t a “social contagion,” according to a new study
23 votes -
One of the best drug candidates for Alzheimer's, aducanumab, just failed to demonstrate efficacy
5 votes -
Her time: Debra Koosed was diagnosed with dementia at sixty-five. That’s when she decided she no longer wanted to live.
5 votes -
Misophonia: When life's noises drive you mad
11 votes -
Not all sleep is equal when it comes to cleaning the brain
16 votes -
The case for transmissible Alzheimer's grows
14 votes -
Scientists find a brain circuit that could explain seasonal depression
6 votes -
The comforting fictions of dementia care
8 votes -
Gender dysphoria may have genetic basis: Australian study
8 votes -
Depersonalization in gender dysphoria: widespread and widely unrecognized
7 votes -
The World Health Organization announces it no longer classifies being transgender as a mental disorder
20 votes -
Rose-colored glasses: A confession
4 votes -
Those with mood disorders; how do you cope?
I was curious if there are others on this site who struggle with mood disorders and what coping mechanisms are used. I myself was diagnosed bipolarII and have struggled with anxiety / depression...
I was curious if there are others on this site who struggle with mood disorders and what coping mechanisms are used. I myself was diagnosed bipolarII and have struggled with anxiety / depression for my entire life. Initially I sought relief in medication and therapy but over the last several years have had great success with a variety of coping mechanisms. Specifically each morning I try to ensure I do several 'feel goods' that include:
- questions - "what am I happy/proud/grateful about? Why? How does that make me feel" and "Who do I love, who loves me, how does that make me feel?"
- Review core beliefs / positive affirmations that I keep on my google drive. Few examples: "I can weather any storm", "Failure is just feedback the current approach isn't working", "I am responsible for everything in my life"
- Journaling about feelings, what's happened.
- Meditation - 20-30 minutes following the breath
I also find that keeping a regular sleep schedule, exercise routine, and scheduling a couple social events a week helps. I have learned drinking and other substance is especially damaging for me so I try my best to avoid as much as possible. I still cycle through depression and hypomania rather rapidly but these things help mitigate those highs and lows.
What do you do to cope?
16 votes