Hi,
How are you?
Hope you have a great day today. I wanted to get this out to you really quick because I have to get going with a very busy day.
Really quick. Have you gotten my f.ree book yet. I hope so. I worked hard on it and it’s totally free. It’s an overview of mental disorders. Took me more than one year of really hard work.
Get it here:
http://www.bipolarcentral.com/overview_of_mental_disorders/
Enjoy.
One thing you hear me talk a lot about is creativity and bipolar disorder.
That’s probably because I really do believe that the two things go hand in hand.
I think one of the symptoms of having the disorder is increased creativity. at least that’s shown itself to be true in my life.
My mom is one of the most creative people I know. And you know, if you’ve read my emails for any length of time, that I always brag on my staff because half of them have the disorder and they are VERY creative!
What that means, for one thing, is that when there is a problem that needs solving, they always seem to find a solution that people who don’t have bipolar disorder weren’t able to see.
I even talk about creativity and bipolar disorder in my courses/systems:
SUPPORTING AN ADULT WITH BIPOLAR DISORDER?
Visit:
http://www.bipolarsupporter.com/report11
SUPPORTING A CHILD/TEEN WITH BIPOLAR DISORDER?
Visit:
http://www.bipolarparenting.com
HAVE BIPOLAR DISORDER?
Visit:
I know of a book on bipolar disorder that’s a sort of question and answer book on the disorder, and someone even asked the question, “Is there a connection between creativity and bipolar disorder?”
The answer surprised me, because at the time I didn’t know that creativity and bipolar disorder were linked. So maybe the answer will surprise you, too.
But the answer was, “The truth is there is a connection between creativity of all sorts and bipolar disorder.”
What was really cool about the book, though, was that it went on to list some very famous people who had or have bipolar disorder.
It was able to do that, because it said that these celebrities chose to publically come out and disclose their own struggles with bipolar disorder, so you know it’s true.
The first one to admit she had bipolar disorder was Patty Duke. In 1987, she wrote an autobiography called Call Me Anna about her bipolar disorder.
Other famous people include:
- Ned Beatty
- Dick Cavett
- Carrie Fisher
- Linda Hamilton
- Mariette Hartle
- Red Sox baseball player Jimmy Piersall
- Bipolar expert Kay Redfield Jamison (who has a whole list of famous people in her book called Touched with Fire)
- TV host Jane Pauley
Supposedly, the famous poet Lord Byron, composer Robert Schumann, painter Vincent van Gogh, and Winston Churchill also had bipolar disorder (only it was called manic depression back then).
If you want to know any other famous people with bipolar disorder, you can go on the internet, or read Touched With Fire by Kay Refield Jamison, who is an expert on bipolar disorder (and has a whole list in her book).
Okay I have to run. I will see you tomorrow.
Your friend,
Dave
David Oliver is the author of the shocking guide “Bipolar Disorder—The REAL Silent Killer.” Click Here to get FREE Information sent via email on how and why bipolar disorder kills.