American psychologist, and professor of psychiatry,
Kay Redfield Jamison, is one of the world's foremost authorities on bipolar disorder.
She's spent her career researching, lecturing, and writing seminal books on the condition. A condition that she also happens to have
had her entire adult life. In her memoir, "An Unquiet Mind," Jamison
details what it really means to be bipolar. She writes of not sleeping for days on end,
of feeling long periods of euphoria, and filling whole notebooks with her racing thoughts and
grandiose ideas. While in these manic states, she experienced
a tremendously inflated sense of self-esteem and did impulsive things that felt good at
the time but had painful consequences, like going on lavish shopping sprees, engaging
in promiscuous behavior, racking up credit card debt, and emptying her bank accounts. But these episodes were followed by emotional
crashes: Crippling bouts of depression that sent her into a suicidal spiral. At the age
of 28, Jamison tried to kill herself by taking an overdose of Lithium, lapsed into a coma,
but thankfully emerged from it determined to find help through medication and therapy. Through her research and writing, Dr. Jamison
has pioneered our understanding of bipolar disorder, depression, and the nexus of mental
struggles that we now think of as mood disorders. And she's probably one of the best ambassadors
we have for all those people who live successful, productive lives with mental illness. Just like the anxiety disorders we talked
about last time, mood disorders are misunderstood. They're diluted by depictions of depression
as something that can be treated with one day at a spa or descriptions of people as
manic depressive just because they were sad yesterday and aren't today. As students of psychology, our job is to understand
what mood disorders really are, how they manifest themselves, and what might cause them. And
as you probably guessed, this can be pretty tough terrain to explore. These disorders
can take people from terrifying highs to pits of despair that seem all but bottomless. But! In between there's what Jamison has called,
"A rich, imaginative life" -- all made possible by your moods. We've been talking a lot about terms and concepts
that mean something different than what you think they mean, but this time, the term "Mood"
is not one of those. In a psychological context, moods are pretty
much exactly what you think they are: Emotional states that are even more subjective and harder
to define than the emotions themselves. And while psychologists have defined about
10 basic emotions, moods tend to fall into two broadly and infinitely variable categories.
You got the good moods and the bad moods. Probably the most important distinction between
emotion and mood is that moods are long-term emotional states rather than discreet, fleeting
feelings. And "mood-disorders," which are characterized
by emotional extremes and challenges in regulating mood tend to be longer-term disturbances. These include depressive disorders, typified
by prolonged hopelessness and lethargy, and bipolar disorders, the most prominent of which
involve alternating between depression and mania. Depression has been called the common cold
of psychological disorders. Which is not to say that it isn't serious, but it's common
and it's pervasive and it's the top reason people seek out mental health help. We've all felt down before, obviously, often
in response to a specific loss: a breakup or a lost job or the death of a loved one. And the fact is, you probably should feel
bad at times like those. It can actually be good for a mind and body to slow down, to
help digest losses that you experience, but in general, sadness is temporary. It's when
sadness and grief extend beyond the generally accepted social norms, or plunge into a depth
that causes serious dysfunction that you find yourself in the territory of depressive disorders. The DSM-5, our handy (if super flawed) user's
guide to psychological disorders officially diagnoses a major depressive disorder when
a patient has experienced at least five signs of depression for more than two weeks. These symptoms include not just depressed
mood, but also significant weight or appetite loss or gain, too much or too little sleep,
decreased interest in activities, feeling worthless, fatigued, or lethargic, difficulty
concentrating or making decisions, and recurrent thoughts of death or suicide. So while everyone experiences sadness, depression
is a physiological as well as psychological illness. It messes with your sleep, and appetite,
and energy, and neurotransmitter levels, all interfering with the way your body runs itself. Plus in keeping with our definition of psychological
disorders, to be considered a true disorder this behavior needs to cause the person or
others around them prolonged distress - the feeling that something is really wrong. Just as a person with a severe, generalized
anxiety disorder may never want to leave the house, a clinically depressed person often
feels so hopeless and overwhelmed that they have trouble living a normal life. And unlike
the bipolar disorders, the depressive disorders tend to be all lows. You've probably heard of manic depression.
It's the outdated term for bipolar disorders. These include those classic dark lows of depression,
but also bouts of the opposite - of extreme mania in more severe cases. Someone suffering
from a bipolar disorder may flip back and forth between normal and depressive and manic
phases within a single day or week or month. And a true manic episode doesn't just mean
being energetic or happy, it's a period of intense, restless, but often optimistic hyperactivity
in which your estimation of yourself and your abilities and your ideas can often get skewed.
Like, really, REALLY skewed. Some patients experience mania only rarely,
but when they do, it can be destructive. Kay Jamison has testified to that. Once during a manic episode, she bought up
a drug store's entire supply of snake-bite kits, convinced of an imminent attack of rattlesnakes
that only she knew was coming. In another, she purchased 20 books by the
Penguin Publishing House because she said, "It could be nice if the penguins could form
a colony." In other words, bad judgment is common. And
it can get worse. Full blown manic episodes often end up in
psychiatric hospitalization, since the risk to self or others can become severe. When
the highs eventually end, they're often followed by dark periods of depression. When left untreated,
suicide or suicide attempts are common, another element of the disorder that Jamison herself
can attest to. Like so many things in psychology, the cause
of mood disorders is often a combination of biological, genetic, psychological, and environmental
factors. We know, for example, that mood disorders run in families - genes matter. And you're
more likely to experience a bipolar or depressive disorder if you have parents or siblings who
suffer from them. Studies have of identical twins show that
if one twin has a bipolar disorder, that the other has a seven in ten chance of also being
diagnosed, regardless of whether they were raised together or apart. And while a stressful life can't give you
bipolar disorder, it could trigger a manic or depressive episode in someone with a pre-existing
condition. Or start a descent into a major depressive episode in someone who never before
had experienced depression. In other words, a person who loses a loved one could go from
sad to depressed or slide into a bipolar episode, but it couldn't cause them to have the disorder
to begin with. In the case of depressive disorders, for most
people, after weeks, months, or even years, their depression can end, hopefully with the
return to baseline healthy functioning. World-wide, women tend to be diagnosed with
major depression more often than men, but many psychologists think this is simply because
women tend to seek treatment more. It's also possible that depression in men tends to manifest
itself more in terms of anger and aggression, than as sadness and hopelessness. This is just an example of how depression
is much more than just being sad and that the characteristic lack of purpose and helplessness
can manifest itself in a lot of different ways. Looking at mood disorders from a neurological
perspective, we see that depressed, manic, and average brains show very different brain
activity in neural imaging scans. As you might expect, a brain in a depressed state slows
down. While a brain in a manic state shows a lot of increased activity, making it hard
for that person to calm down or focus or sleep. Our brain's neurotransmitter chemistry also
changes with these different states. For example, norepinephrine, which usually increases arousal
and focus, is severely lacking in depressed brains, but kind of off the charts during
manic episodes. In fact, drugs that seek to reduce mania in part do it by reducing norepinephrine
levels. You may have also heard about how low serotonin levels correlate with depressive
states. Exercise, like jogging or break dancing or whatever, increases serotonin levels, which
is one reason exercise is often recommended to combat depression. And most medications
designed to treat depression seem to work by raising serotonin or norepinephrine levels. And of course there's yet another way to look
at things. The social-cognitive perspective examines how our thinking and behavior influence
depression. People with depression often view bad events
through an internal lens or mind set that influences how they're interpreted. And how
you explain events to yourself, in a negative or positive way, can really effect how you
recover from them - or don't. Say you were humiliated in the lunch room
when someone tripped you and chicken soup flew all over the place, and you sat down
on a brownie, and it was just a bad day. A depressive mind might immediately start thinking
that the humiliation will last forever, that no one will ever let you live it down, that
it's somehow your own fault, and you can't ever do anything right. That negative thinking, learned helplessness,
self-blame, and over-thinking can feed off itself and basically smother the joy out of
the brain, eventually creating a vicious self-fulfilling cycle of negative thinking. The good news is that the cycle can be broken
by getting help from a professional, turning your attention outward, doing more fun things,
and maybe even moving to a different environment. But again, that social-cognitive prospective
is just part of a much bigger puzzle. Positive thinking is important, but it's often inadequate on its own
own when up against genetic or neurological factors. So mood disorders are complicated conditions
and rarely are they eliminated with a single cure. Instead, they're often things you just
live with. And as Dr. Jamison has shown us, you can live well. Today we talked about what mood disorders
are, as well as what they aren't. You learned about the symptoms of depressive and bipolar
disorders, and the possible biological, genetic, environmental, and social-cognitive causes
of mood disorders. Thank you for watching this episode, which
was brought to you by Marshall Scott and crediblefind.com. Thank you so much to all
of you that have supported us! To find out how you can become a sponsor or supporter,
just go to suppable.com/crashcourse. This episode was written by Kathleen Yale,
edited by Blake de Pastino, and our consultant is Dr. Ranjit Bhagwat. Our director and editor
is Nicholas Jenkins. The script supervisor is Michael Aranda who is also our sound designer.
And the graphics team is Thought Cafe.
Was just about to post this. You beat me to it, you get the upvote.
Wow. Best description ever. My last mania phase I was convinced that I should quit my accounting job and open up a metaphysical shop. I am well versed in the occult, but I've never ran a business, owned or rented commercial space, I have no capitol, and have terrible credit thanks to some idiotic manic decisions. I think the most embarrassing thing is when you've told everyone around you about it and you take the first few steps before realizing how ridiculously impractical it all is. The excuses of why you can't then have to start coming, just compiling the self hatred.
All my "harmul side effects" they mention like money etc I can't identity with as much as those of who physically get hurt because we think we have super abilities. I break bones. I think I can do anything physical.