I'm so sorry to tell you a story of y personal Life-Time, on this, our
common earth: I've been diagnosed to be MANIC-DEPRESSIVE back in year 1984, there in Zurich, Switzerland, where I did unfortunatle think about HOW BIG is a HALF BIT. Whilst I thought I did find a solution for this for me intersting question at those times, Nobody has been interested, and I thus have been put into HOSPITAL. Since then, I#m suffering for beeing MANIC DEPRESSIVE; like Chopin and may other composers, and painters, as well. Currently, I'm feeling very bad.... So sorry to disturb you with this (too much personalized) message. Thomas. -- Thomas Schneider (www.thsitc.com) _______________________________________________ Ibm-netrexx mailing list [hidden email]
Thomas Schneider, Vienna, Austria (Europe) :-)
www.thsitc.com www.db-123.com |
Thomas, people say Bipolar Disorder these days. The condition is surprisingly common -- my ex-boss, a successful and famous neurosurgeon, had it and did not feel it necessary to conceal it, at least from colleagues. His was controllable with Lithium, and I hope drugs can help you. If it isn't causing misery, many mental health professionals are inclined to regard it as an ordinary component of personality. I hope you will find relief. George On Mon, May 2, 2011 at 9:10 PM, Thomas Schneider <[hidden email]> wrote: I'm so sorry to tell you a story of y personal Life-Time, on this, our common earth: _______________________________________________ Ibm-netrexx mailing list [hidden email] |
I was (seriously, not snarkily) thinking Asperger’s Syndrome when reading some of the posts. Bipolar works, also. I have Asperger’s, and may or may not be bipolar. My son is definitely Bipolar and his therapy is going to cost me over $100K out of pocket (insurance won’t cover most of it) this year. I never wanted to retire anyway… Personally, I like the term manic-depressive better; it seems more descriptive of the experience. No problem being bipolar or autistic these days, it is, as George notes, increasingly common, especially in programming and musical circles (I’ve been a professional at both of these professions). And admitting that you have the problem has the added break of people cutting you some slack when you screw up. Speaking of drugs, be careful of serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors; they can be a bitch to discontinue. I’m on week 9 of withdrawal symptoms, and that’s under a doctor’s supervised plan. Discontinuation syndrome consists (from Wikipedia: dysphoric mood, irritability, agitation, dizziness, sensory disturbances (e.g., paresthesias such as electric shock sensations), anxiety, confusion, headache, lethargy, emotional liability, insomnia, hypomania, tinnitus, and seizures. So far, the only symptom I don’t have is the seizures. The tinnitus is particular prevalent, as is the irritability (my wife will be nominated for sainthood once the symptoms pass away). Back to your regularly scheduled Rexx arguments…. D From: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of George Hovey
On Mon, May 2, 2011 at 9:10 PM, Thomas Schneider <[hidden email]> wrote: I'm so sorry to tell you a story of y personal Life-Time, on this, our common earth: _______________________________________________ Ibm-netrexx mailing list [hidden email] |
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