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Does anyone else use bipolar mood charts?

Question:
Three years ago I kept a mood chart for about 9 months while I was going on an anti-depressant for the first time. It has been a real help lately, as I have gone back on the a-d and wanted to know how I responded to this drug before. Keeping a mood chart has also been helpful now because I don't just track negative moods (mania, depression), I also track positive moods and other mood-illness-related emotions (such as anxiety and anger). By keeping track of my moods, it helps me to become more aware of how I am feeling (which is a problem for me), and to watch trends. With excel I can create bar charts, graphs, and look at correlations between variables, like whether or not the amount of time I sleep is correlated with my energy level. It is a GREAT help in talking with my psychiatrist. I was wondering if anyone else out there keeps a mood chart, and if so what you keep track of.


Answer:
In making mine I tracked down all of the bipolar mood charts that I could find to design my own, and I encourage people to customize their own mood chart to fit their own needs. (I have had a long off-line conversation with someone trying to come up with a mood chart for rapid-cycling). Recently I have added a section about "caretaking behavior" which tracks those behaviors that fall by the way-side when I stop taking care of myself (diet, taking a shower, spending time socializing) to come up with an overall "caregiving" variable which tells me in behavioral terms whether or not I am getting better. How do other people think of "depression"? In coming up with an overall index of my depression, I averaged three different variables, Depressed mood Lack of energy Difficulty thinking which describes how I look at bipolar depression. Anyone else have other ways that they think of "bipolar depression"? I would add a mood chart created at Hah-vard by Gary Sachs, that includes space for the various medications someone is taking, plus a visual chart of their moods, at http://www.mgh.harvard.edu/depts/allpsych/bipolar/moodchart.html Someone has taken the time to put this Sachs chart, which is in a difficult-to-read .gif file into a word file that you can download at http://people.ne.mediaone.net/pmbrig/mood_chart_dl.html A much simpler mood chart for bipolars: http://www.healthyplace.com/Communities/Bipolar/jinnah/solutions/Page.... html



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