High Tide, Low Tide: The Caring Friend's Guide to Bipolar Disorder (Revised edition)
Description:
Review\nThis book is a brilliant practical guide to understanding your friend's diagnosis and symptoms, the reality of treatments and therapies, and how to overcome the challenges of long-distance communication. More than that, it is a book about what friendship means.
-- Rachel Kelly, author of Black Rainbow: How words healed me -- my journey through depression, and Walking on Sunshine: 52 Small Steps to Happiness, Ambassador for SANE and Rethink Mental Illness.\nFriendship soothes the soul and provides hope for people with bipolar disorder and yet the illness creates unique challenges to the friendships we so desperately want and need. Marty and Fran specifically address these challenges in this bright, uplifting and brutally honest book. Filled with stories and practical tips, there is more laughter than sorrow as the reader learns to cultivate a loving, kind and caring friendship that transcends the illness and creates a lasting bond.
-- Julie A. Fast, author of Loving Someone with Bipolar Disorder, Take Charge of Bipolar Disorder, and Get it Done When You're Depressed.\nMarty and Fran are best buds who have an unbelievable story of friendship, resiliency and what it means to have someone in your life who says 'I hear you and I am here for you.'
-- Cheryl Ramsay, Community Development Specialist, National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) Maine.\nA deeply honest and detailed account of two people's journey as friends, which reminds us that mental illness doesn't change what friendship is all about: being there for those we love.
-- Bridget Woodhead, Director, Traincon. Certified Mental Health First Aid instructor.\nExtraordinarily well-written and powerful. I know from my own personal experience with friends living with mental illness, that meaningful two-way relationships are a key factor in attaining life balance and recovery. This is a very important book and could be helpful to many people.
-- Anne Pringle, Member of Board of Trustees, Maine Mental Health Partners 2009-2015 (Chair 2010-2012); Past Chair, "It Takes a Community" initiative, Spring Harbor Hospital and Maine Mental Health Partners; Former Mayor of Portland, Maine.\nHow can you be a good friend when your friend lives with mental illness?
We all want to be there for our friends, but it can be hard to know what to do when your friend lives with mental illness, especially if you live far apart. Transatlantic best friends Martin Baker and Fran Houston share what they’ve learned about growing a supportive, mutually rewarding friendship between a “well one” and an “ill one.”
Revised and updated, High Tide, Low Tide: The Caring Friend’s Guide to Bipolar Disorder offers no-nonsense advice from the caring friend’s point of view, original approaches and practical tips, illustrated with real-life conversations and examples.
No one is too far away to be cared for or to care
Support your friend and celebrate each other, whether you live on the same street or oceans apart. Learn the key skills and attitudes you need for a successful caring friendship, and strategies to support your friend through episodes of mania, depression, and suicidal thinking, whilst also taking care of yourself.