Showing posts with label setting boundaries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label setting boundaries. Show all posts

Thursday, August 21, 2025

Staying Grounded on the Go: A Self-Care Plan for Traveling with Bipolar Disorder

 

Staying Grounded on the Go: A Self-Care Plan for Traveling with Bipolar Disorder

I Took My Diagnosis With Me, Not Just My Luggage

I used to think travel meant a break from my mental health routine—that rest was optional and the thrill of adventure would keep me going. I convinced myself medication wasn’t necessary on vacation, and that the mood swings I felt abroad were caused by new environments, not the bipolar disorder I carried with me.

It took several post-travel episodes—and too many hospitalizations—to realize that real freedom comes not from escaping my structure, routine, and healthy habits, but from protecting them wherever I go.

Travel invites excitement, but for those of us living with bipolar disorder, it also carries the risk of dysregulation if we don’t safeguard our mental health. Without a plan for medication, sleep, and emotional regulation, I found that travel quickly became overwhelming instead of joyful.

This blog shares how to create a self-care plan for travel—one that centers stability, energy, and emotional wellness while leaving room for adventure.


The Purpose of a Travel Self-Care Plan

Self-care while traveling is essential. It’s tempting to believe that the trip itself is self-care—but for people managing bipolar disorder, it takes more than a ticket to care for our mental health. Travel disrupts structure, routine, and healthy habits—the very things that keep symptoms manageable.

A Travel Wellness Plan works hand in hand with a Mental Health Crisis Plan (like the one I created in Packing Peace of Mind). Together, they provide flexibility and safety while allowing you to enjoy the journey. A self-care plan doesn’t limit fun—it sustains it.


Essential Factors of a Travel Wellness Plan

When creating a bipolar self-care routine for travel, consider key factors that shape your experience:

Time Zones
Shifting time zones can disrupt circadian rhythms and trigger manic or depressive episodes. Start adjusting your sleep 1–2 weeks before departure to align with your destination’s schedule.

Length of Stay
The length and type of travel matter. A three-hour train ride affects your energy differently than a 12-hour international flight. Factor recovery time into your self-care plan.

Weather
Sudden changes in light, temperature, or pressure can destabilize mood. Increased sunlight, for example, can trigger mania. Knowing your triggers allows you to prepare with wellness strategies that balance body and mind.

Travel Self-Care Checklist

  • Medication reminders: alarms, organizers, or blister packs to manage doses across time zones.

  • Sleep hygiene: consistent schedules, eye masks, white noise, melatonin if prescribed.

  • Nutrition & hydration: fuel your body with stabilizing foods and plenty of water.

  • Emotional check-ins: journaling, mood-tracking apps, or voice notes.


Navigating Overstimulation and Energy Crashes

Travel can be overstimulating, often sparking hypomanic highs followed by energy crashes. These ups and downs don’t have to ruin your trip if you prepare.

  • Plan rest days: Build downtime into your itinerary to prevent exhaustion.

  • Bring calming tools: Music playlists, grounding stones, aromatherapy, or breathing exercises can help regulate emotions.

  • Notice early signs: If mania or depression surfaces, respond without shame. Rest when needed and lean into energy in healthy ways. Medication adherence is crucial during these shifts.


Know Your Travel Boundaries

Boundaries protect your wellness while traveling. Choose companions who respect your needs—those who understand when you say no to an outing or need quiet time alone.

Mindful travel means balancing exploration with rest. Whether wandering a bustling city or watching a sunrise on the beach, give yourself permission to enjoy your surroundings without burning out.


Final Thoughts

You Deserve to Feel Safe and Alive, No Matter Where You Go

Travel became more meaningful once I stopped pretending I could leave my diagnosis behind. I can’t pack a suitcase and ignore bipolar disorder—it travels with me, everywhere.

That means my structure, routine, and healthy habits—medication, sleep hygiene, emotional check-ins—must come too. A wellness plan isn’t about limiting joy; it’s about protecting the freedom to explore safely.

Travel is a radical act of self-trust. Some trips will go smoothly, others may test my limits, but every time I prepare with care and compassion, I know I can continue the journey.

Because whether I’m at home or halfway across the world, I deserve stability, healing, and adventure.

To my readers: What would it look like to design a trip that honours both your needs and your spirit? What self-care non-negotiables belong in your “mental health passport”?

Monday, August 4, 2025

Finding Stability in Chaos: Recovering from a Manic Episode While Living in a Shelter

Finding Stability in Chaos: Recovering from a Manic Episode While Living in a Shelter

When Recovery Doesn't Come with Comfort

The first night I spent in a shelter came after a 72-hour hold in a psychiatric unit. I was still mid-mania—hearing voices, paranoid, and overstimulated. The flickering fluorescent lights, the shuffle of strangers outside my door, and the clanging pipes in the walls felt threatening. At 11:00 p.m., the lights went out. But sleep didn’t come easily. I curled into a ball on the top bunk, silent tears running down my face. I realized: I no longer had a home. This shelter bed was it.

That was episode eight out of thirteen manic-psychotic episodes I’ve experienced so far. Mania is an emotionally explosive ordeal that can last weeks or months, leaving behind confusion, guilt, and exhaustion for both the person and their loved ones. Recovery typically takes 6–8 weeks—and requires peace and stability. Neither of those is easy to find in the chaos of a homeless shelter.

This blog explores what it means to reclaim mental clarity, dignity, and self-worth while navigating bipolar disorder recovery in short-term transitional housing. It’s my lived experience—and it may reflect the reality of many others still trying to find their way back from the in-between.


Navigating the Noise: Recovering from Mania in a Homeless Shelter

The one thing I remember most about shelter life was the noise—constant and unrelenting. Even at night, the old building echoed with sounds: pipes banging, doors slamming, conversations at all hours. Privacy was nonexistent. Healing felt impossible.

Every morning at 5:00 a.m., I would quietly climb down from my bunk, my body still aching from restraints and trauma. I’d stretch on a small patch of floor—my first attempt at creating routine. It wasn’t much, but it was a start.

Recovering from mania in a homeless shelter was the hardest thing I’ve ever done. I was surrounded by women hardened by survival—many also dealing with mental illness, addiction, and housing insecurity. Trust was rare, softness even rarer. These were women who had spent years on the streets and only came to shelters when the cold became unbearable.

I’m someone who wants to help others. But in that moment, I had to focus on protecting myself—emotionally, physically, mentally. There’s a certain shame and hopelessness that comes with being mentally ill and unhoused. Still, I had people in my corner—my tribe—cheering me on from a distance. That helped me survive the noise.


Small Rituals, Big Impact: Coping Strategies for Bipolar Disorder in Transitional Housing

After a few weeks, the fog began to lift. My mornings started with deep breathing, stretching, and journaling at the kitchen table before the noise of the day took over. These grounding rituals helped me feel safe in a place that often wasn’t.

Shelter life had its own rhythm. I’d make coffee while a staff member cooked breakfast. Lunch followed at noon. After dinner, each resident was assigned a cleaning task—kitchen, bathroom, or living room duties.

I began to make small choices to support my healing: eating better, wearing clothes that made me feel like myself, getting my hair and nails done with help from Grama Judie, and going to church on Sundays to remember that God still had a plan for me.

During the day, I worked from the business office searching for housing, making calls to mental health programs, and putting myself on waitlists for case management. With two weeks left at the shelter, I secured both a transitional housing unit and a dedicated mental health worker.

Coping with bipolar disorder in transitional housing required structure, routine, and flexibility. It meant showing up daily, choosing peace over chaos, and creating new habits in a temporary space. It also meant believing that things could, and would, get better.


Support Looks Different Here: Mental Health in Shelter Communities

In shelters, support looks different—and sharing too much can put you at risk. Vulnerability is necessary for healing, but it can also open doors to exploitation. Material envy, emotional manipulation, or trauma bonding are real dangers in this environment.

Setting boundaries is key. Be mindful of what you share and with whom. Choose connections rooted in mutual respect and emotional safety. These relationships may not be lifelong, but they can serve as powerful reminders that you're not alone in your fight for recovery.

Not every person in a shelter is safe to trust. But some will surprise you with their kindness, their grit, and their capacity to understand. Build wisely.


Final Thought: Recovery Isn’t Linear—Especially in a Shelter

Recovery doesn’t follow a straight path. It’s messy, unpredictable, and often nothing like you imagined. Mine was public, painful, humbling—and ultimately, transformative.

My time in the shelter system wasn’t what I wanted. But it gave me something I needed: a new perspective, self-awareness, and undeniable proof that I could survive instability and build stability anyway.

To the women I met there—the ones who challenged me, supported me, and reminded me of who I am—thank you. You’re a part of my story now.

To my readers:
What does recovery look like when everything around you is falling apart?
How do you hold on to your sense of self in a place designed only for survival?

Thursday, December 26, 2024

Understanding Codependency: A Woman’s Perspective on Bipolar Disorder

Understanding Codependency: A Woman’s Perspective on Bipolar Disorder

When I first learned the word “codependency,” I was sitting in a room full of women who had partners or family members who struggled with addiction and/or mental health.I was in my early 30s and I was trying to gain understanding about my own mental health and substance use concerns and how they were affecting my family dynamic. As I listened to the stories of these women I realized that codependency ran deep in the root of how my family and I communicated with one another and this behaviour was having a profound effect on my mental health development and the health of the relationships in my family.  


What is Codependency?


Codependency is a learned behavior that involves an unhealthy attachment to another person or relationship. It occurs when one person believes it's their job to “save” another person by catering to all their needs. A codependent person builds their identity and self-worth around this purpose and practices enabling behaviors that places themselves and the other person in a seemingly never ending cycle of dependency. This often happens when one party struggles with addiction or mental health concerns and the codependent person tries to shield them from the consequences of their behaviour.


When a person is supporting another in a healthy way there are boundaries, honest communication and balance in the relationship. No one is trying to save anyone else, rather the supportive person practices compassion and empathy while letting the other individual know that they need to seek help for their issues or concerns. A supportive person is self-aware and uses their judgment to make decisions about stepping back for the sake of their own mental health. A healthy supportive person knows when to let go, an unhealthy codependent person does not. The main behaviours and character traits of a codependent person are as follows:


  • Consistently elevating the needs of others above your own

  • Controlling behavior

  • Self-sacrificing behavior

  • Fear of rejection

  • Lack of Self-love

  • Lack of Boundaries

  • Lack of Self-care

  • Low Self-esteem/self-worth


Recognizing Codependent Patterns: Personal Reflection


My mother and I had a codependent relationship dynamic. I practiced codependency in seeking her validation in all things creating an unhealthy attachment style from the time I was a teenager until I took stock of this negative personality trait. My mother was a nurse that worked 12 hour shifts almost every day, she had a family which included my little sister, my father and my grandmother (before she passed away), as well as a household to manage and she couldn’t do it all. I am the oldest daughter so a lot of household responsibilities fell on me. This might seem like normal daughterly duties I’m referring to but it was more complex than that. I wanted to take the burden off my mother, I needed to hear that I was a good daughter, that I was loved and a valued member of my family, so I took on the role of house manager and caregiver to my whole family including my mother. 


By the time I was 17-years-old, I was considering where to go for post-secondary education and the university I was interested in was 4 hours from home. I was terrified to leave my mother because it had become like second nature to manage the household while she took much needed rest from the demands of her nursing career. My mother and I were like the co-captains of a team with three other team members that depended on us  so if I left, who would take care of her and the rest of the team? I actually spoke to a child psychologist about my concerns and his advice was “just be a kid.” I had taken on the role of my family’s saviour for so long that I simply didn’t know how to just be a kid.  


When I went away to university I was struggling with my mental health after being diagnosed with Depression and Generalized Anxiety disorder, I didn’t know where I fit after walking away from the codependent role I had at home. I wasn’t getting the daily validation from my mother, I was struggling in school and I sought love and attention from the wrong people. I would end my university career as a heavy substance user and within a year of graduation I would have my first manic episode. This is the point that the codependency dynamic between my mother and myself would shift and she would spend over a decade enabling me and trying to save the formally reliable daughter she no longer recognized.


My mother is a devout Christian, believing if she did the right things for her mentally ill daughter then all would be well. She tried to “pray the cray away,” but in doing that ignored the reality of the experience I was having, which only served to frustrate and anger me, placing a wedge in our already fragile relationship. The way she enabled me the most was to clean up the chaos and destruction I caused during my manic episodes so I never fully realized the damage I was doing to myself and others. She also tended to deny my drug use usually because of an idealistic sense of false hope. She tried tough love, eventually stopping the daily visits and food delivery when I was in hospital or by kicking me out of the family home but she made it clear she was always there for me emotionally and financially. This is what codependency looks like. 


During the pandemic I moved back in with my parents after an eight year departure to Toronto and this was a mistake that became detrimental to my already fragile mental health. The cycle of codependency began again and I realized it had never stopped; we had just taken a much needed break. I lived with my parents for two years before I realized I needed to change my behaviours and habits to find balance in our relationship, so I left. I was 40-years-old and I knew I had to finally run away from home in order to find myself. I’m not saying this is the only way to break free from a codependent dynamic but I knew it's what I needed to do, I needed space to think, to breathe. I had to learn to manage my mental health, get my substance use under control and address my issues around self-love, my self-esteem and my self-worth. Only with all of these elements in-line could I communicate effectively with my mother and set boundaries that were definitive. 


Some of the resources I used to break-free from codependency:


  • Mind Over Mood, Dennis Greenberger and Christine Padesky: Cognitive Behavioural Therapy principles, change how you feel by changing how you think. 


  • Codependency No More, Melody Beattie: Learn the root causes of codependency and the steps needed to heal yourself, including establishing boundaries, cultivating self-trust, and taking part in a supportive recovery community. 


  • The Set Boundaries Workbook, Nedra Glover Tawwab: A step-by-step resource for setting, communicating, and reinforcing healthy boundaries at home, work and in life.


  • The Self-Love Workbook, Shainna Ali: A life-changing guide to boosting self-esteem, recognize your worth and find genuine happiness.


Final Thoughts


After doing the work I needed on my journey of self-awareness I have compassion and empathy for my mother and family having experienced a lot related to my mental health and substance use. Although my mother still falls into codependent habits our dynamic has changed dramatically. I set boundaries with her and effectively communicate my feelings and needs nurturing a stronger, more balanced bond between us. Codependency is a state of mind that one can unlearn if you are willing to however, it's important to note that it's usually not an issue with the other person (they may have other concerns), the actual codependent dynamic lives inside you and will continue to affect your mental health and the health of your relationships if you don’t stop and take stock of your actions and the role you play in fostering this unhealthy behavior. One of the most important and difficult parts of healing broken relationships and ending the cycle of codependency is self-reflection and the development of self-awareness. Remember you are not alone in your journey and everyday is an opportunity to do something you’ve never done before. So go forth and find your independence from  codependency.