TRUSTED FOR OVER 25 YEARS

The Julie A. Fast management plan for bipolar disorder and psychotic disorders is used worldwide to promote brain stability and family harmony

Whether you are new to the topic of bipolar disorder or are looking for more information on mania, depression, anxiety and psychosis, this website shares the work of Julie A. Fast and her 25+ years of experience as a researcher, family member, partner and a person with bipolar disorder and a psychotic disorder.

You will find all of Julie’s online work here as well as information on her books, workshops and health care professional trainings that can help you find stability for yourself, a loved one or a client.

Meet

Julie A. Fast

Julie is a world leading brain health expert on the topics of bipolar, schizoaffective disorder, depression, anxiety and psychosis. She is the bestselling author of Loving Someone with Bipolar Disorder: Understanding and Helping Your Partner, Take Charge of Bipolar Disorder and Getting it Done When You’re Depressed. Julie’s work offers a balanced, well researched perspective on serious brain disorders and their impact on the person with the diagnosis as well as those who care about someone with the illnesses. Julie has worked with and trained health care professionals for over 20 years and her system is used around the world for those who want to find stability and reach their goals in life.

Along with helping those with bipolar disorder and psychotic disorders create a life long management plan, Julie also specializes in plans to help family members and partners find their own plan when a loved one has bipolar disorder or a psychotic disorder. Julie’s main goal is to prevent bipolar disorder and psychotic disorders in the next generation.

Julie's

Books

Julie’s books address the person with the illness as well as those who want to help a loved one or client find stability. Her books have been translated into many languages and her system is used by millions of people around the world. Her system has been tested personally and professionally for over 20 years. Her goal is simple- to help people all over the world recognize the symptoms of bipolar disorder and psychosis early enough to prevent the chaos of untreated brain illness.

Take Charge of Bipolar Disorder

Take Charge was the first bipolar disorder management book and is still the gold standard for those who want to learn how to manage bipolar disorder symptoms. The book’s audience includes those with bipolar, family members, friends, partners and health care professions.

The second edition is now available. Along with Julie’s treatment and management plan, the new edition includes her research on mania in the eyes, ketogenic metabolic therapy for bipolar and her Bipolar Significant Seven list on substances that negatively affect the bipolar brain.

Loving Someone with Bipolar Disorder

The first ever book for a partner of someone with a brain illness, Loving Someone with Bipolar Disorder covers the basics of bipolar disorder and then shares strategies for communication, self care, treatment, and management specifically for a partner or coparent. Julie understands the topic from both sides and shares what it’s like to have a partner with bipolar disorder and then offers the perspective of having bipolar herself. Julie shares the story of her long term relationship with her partner Ivan who lives with bipolar one and teaches partners and health care professionals how to help someone with bipolar disorder find stability.

Getting It Done When You’re Depressed

Getting it Done When You’re Depressed teaches the reader how to function while in a depression episode. It’s the first book to address the reality that many people with depression need time to find stability and during that time, they still have to get things done. The book helps family members, partners and health care professionals create a plan to use with a loved one who may feel too ill to take action.

The second edition includes strategies to manage social media use during a downswing as well as ideas for family members and partners who want to help a person in a depressive episode.

“Expert by Experience”—that’s Julie Fast. She was an expert in 2006 when the first edition of this book was published. She’s even more of an expert now, having spent years working with people with bipolar disorder, and helping them improve their lives. 

As a psychiatrist, I learned most of what I know from my patients. They’re the ones who know the many, tiny details of bipolar disorder experience. If one has the opportunity to listen closely to many people describing their symptoms, even someone who doesn’t have bipolar disorder can come to understand the subtleties of the experience. 

But Julie Fast had a big head start on me: she knows bipolar disorder from the inside as well.  And, in the last 15 years, she’s continued to be one of the most diligent students of bipolar disorder that I know. “Student” in this case meaning a life-long learner. She’s been preparing a new edition of this book for years because she’s always looking for another insight into this so-complex human experience, this bipolar thing.

-Dr. Jim Phelps




I you could only buy one book about bipolar…

If you could only buy one book about bipolar disorder and how to manage it, THIS IS IT! A book written for people with the illness by someone with the illness. It is easy to navigate & read and covers so many aspect of the illness, from detecting symptoms, to managing relationships, to beneficial lifestyle changes around diet, sleep, exercise, light, and substances. I cannot stress enough what a valuable book this is. It’s also a great read for those who know someone with bipolar disorder and want to learn more.

-Ren

Three of the biggest things that have helped me are…

1. Saying out loud to myself and my husband “I am not the problem, you are not the problem – BIPOLAR is the problem. . It’s us against bipolar!”

2. It really calms me down and helps me to stay in the moment when I remind myself not to take so much of this personally. My husband is so difficult when the mood swings are raging, but I now know that it’s not him talking, it’s bipolar talking.

3. The difference between reacting and responding. Huge! It definitely takes practice and patience but can diffuse a crisis with just a well thought out response instead of an emotional reaction. The Bipolar Conversation chapter really helps. 

Your book has already helped me immeasurably in just a few months. I am so grateful to you for what you have done and what you continue to do!

This book has been very helpful. It’s real, and you can tell it’s meant for someone with diagnosed depression. It is not a gimmick self-help book, not in the least! If you suffer from depression, this is a MUST read!

Julie, you are the only person I have read who lives with what they write about at the same time you are helping others. You turned your terrible experiences into a positive for helping others who get depressed. Thank you Julie.

Many different people will read this book:

  • People recently diagnosed with bipolar disorder who seek a way to manage the illness successfully and ultimately prevent mood swings.
  • People living with bipolar disorder for many years who hope to find more tools to manage the illness more effectively.
  • Family members and partners who just went through the often life changing experience of a loved one’s diagnosis. 
  • Grandparents, parents, siblings, and friends of someone who is really struggling or lacks the insight needed to get help.
  • Health care professionals who want to learn more effective management strategies to use with clients.


Whoever you are,
Take Charge of Bipolar Disorder can help you learn to manage or help someone manage bipolar disorder. A comprehensive treatment plan doesn’t leave anyone out. Everyone matters, and everyone can help and find help. Bipolar disorder does not only affect the person with the illness. It also affects anyone who has a personal or professional relationship with the person who has the illness. Because of this, Take Charge of Bipolar Disorder discusses the needs of the person with bipolar disorder as well as the needs of family members, partners, friends, and health care professionals.

Your Current Treatment Options

Bipolar disorder is a very complex illness. It’s also serious and can be life threatening if unmanaged. Thus, the person with the illness needs a variety of techniques to manage symptoms successfully. Although some people can use medications alone to get back to a more stable life, for many people this isn’t the reality. Most people with bipolar disorder realize they need more than medications, but aren’t sure of their choices.  The most effective plan combines medications, lifestyle changes, behavior modifications, and the most effective way to ask for help. The goal of this book is to help you find the right combination of medications and management strategies for lasting stability.

What Is the Take Charge Plan?

The Take Charge Plan can be seen as a pie. One quarter of the pie is medications and bipolar safe supplements. The second quarter includes lifestyle changes. The third covers behavioral changes, while the final piece of the pie teaches people with bipolar disorder how to reach out for support and ask for help from the right people.

Featured

Content

Can the Keto Diet Help with Bipolar Medication Weight Gain?

Yes! The research is clear. The ketogenic diet originally created for epilepsy treatment shows great promise in preventing medication weight gain caused by bipolar disorder medications. It can also help with mood management over time.

Julie’s new article from Bp Magazine shares all you need to know about this topic:

bphope.com

Julie Talks to AM Northwest about Her New Book

Play Video

Julie talks with CBS news about Kanye West and Bipolar Disorder

Play Video

Julie's

Treatment and Management Prototcol

For over 25 years, Julie has worked in the bipolar community to create a plan that can be used by anyone who wants to manage or help someone manage bipolar disorder symptoms. The following protocol list shares the order she feels works best when creating an overall plan for a stable life.

Get the Diagnosis Right
Learn the treatment options
Create a management plan
Practice trigger management
Study the Bipolar Significant Seven
Ask for help
Cultivate communication skills
Focus on regular sleep
Prevention
Treat bipolar first

What is

Bipolar Disorder?

Bipolar disorder is an ancient, genetic illness that affects a person’s ability to self regulate the mood. Bipolar is a mood disorder that usually includes two moods: mania and depression. Within these two mood episodes, people with bipolar illness can also experience anxiety, irritation and anger, focus problems and psychosis.The illness affects 4-6% of the world population and is not created by childhood experiences. Bipolar disorder is on a spectrum, but the majority who have this disorder receive a bipolar one or a bipolar two diagnosis. Bipolar one means a person has depression with hypomania and full blown mania while bipolar two means the person has depression and hypomania. The only difference between the two diagnoses is the intensity of the mania. Bipolar is complex! It is part sleep disorder, mood disorder, psychotic disorder and anxiety disorder. Take Charge of Bipolar Disorder clearly explains a bipolar treatment and management program that can be used by the whole family. The articles below share more information on the symptoms of bipolar disorder as well as Julie’s pioneering management plan.

Bipolar Disorder

Resources

Julie’s books explain bipolar disorder in detail. The articles and videos below offer more information on how to manage bipolar disorder symptoms as well as information on how to talk to others about bipolar disorder symptoms and behaviors. Julie’s articles and videos have over 15 million views world wise. She regularly works for bp Magazine, Psychology Today and HealthCentral.

It’s important to know what bipolar looks like as compared to other brain illnesses. Bipolar is a genetic illness that is not related to childhood adversity or parenting styles.. It’s episodic and the person is stable between mood swings. Bipolar episodes always include sleep changes as well as changes to a person’s ability to handle life! These articles can help you get a correct diagnosis for yourself, a loved one or a client.

Is it Bipolar or a Different Diagnosis?

10 Top Myths About Bipolar Disorder

10 Signs of Bipolar Disorder

Exploring the Sister Diagnosis of SchizoAffective Disorder Bipolar Type

There is a big difference between depression and bipolar depression. It’s important to know the difference so that you can educate those around you about treating and managing bipolar depression. Bipolar depression is always tinged with the possibility of mania. For this reason, treatment has to be bipolar specific regarding medications and management.

What Is the Difference Between Unipolar Depression and Bipolar Depression?

20 Unexpected Signs of Bipolar Depression

What Type of Depression is This?

How to Help a Loved One with Bipolar Depression

Medications are important in bipolar treatment, but the majority of symptom management comes from making lifestyle and behavioral changes. This is a positive. There are many ways to manage mood swings and prevent bipolar episodes.

How to Be Your Own Bipolar Detective

9 Tips to Help Sleep With Bipolar

Managing the Odd, Unexpected Bipolar Triggers

Letter from a Depressed Person

Bipolar disorder is a mania illness. It helps to manage mania first as this also prevents the inevitable depression that comes after a manic episode. The goal it to focus on sleep management and learn to recognize signs of mania from the very beginning of an episode.

Bipolar and Restlessness: What is PRE-Mania?

A Letter from a Dysphoric Manic Person

Letter From A EUPHORIC Manic Person

3 Clues to Recognize Bipolar Disorder Mania in the Eyes

All people with bipolar disorder can experience psychosis. Psychotic symptoms are either attached to a depression or a mania. Psychosis is a separate symptom from the mood and needs to be addressed by anyone with a bipolar disorder diagnosis.

9 Facts You Should Know about Psychosis

The Differences Between Mania and Psychosis

Bipolar Disorder Psychosis and Sneaky Sneaky Hallucinations

What is the main trigger of bipolar disorder symptoms? Substances that affect the bipolar brain. Julie created The Bipolar Significant Seven after over 20 years of research into how substances affect bipolar mood swings and psychosis. Learning this list helps prevent mood swings.

TDB

TDB

TDB

Bipolar disorder episodes can be managed and ultimately prevented. It’s not easy and it takes a plan, but prevention is key. Prevention is FREE. Prevention is the goal.

How to Be Your Own “Bipolar Detective”

Julie Shares Her Experiences with Suicidal Thoughts

Mania: Am I Having Too Much Fun?

Untreated bipolar disorder ruins relationships. People can learn to manage the mood swings that impact relationships with family, partners, friends and coworkers. It’s hard work, but it’s possible.

How to Say Sorry for Your Mistakes and Forgive Yourself at the Same Time

Relationships and the Bipolar Trap

How Can I Best Help My Bipolar Friend?

How Do I Know What is Bipolar and What is the Real Person?

Bipolar disorder is confusing! It’s an illness that affects thoughts, emotions and behaviors. It makes sense that trying to distinguish between bipolar disorder and the ‘real’ person is challenging.  The answer is to focus on stability. If you know how you, a loved one or a client thinks, feels and behaves when stable, it’s a LOT easier to recognize mood swings before they go too far. Start with these resources and make it a daily plan to look for signs of stability while also looking for bipolar symptoms. The last article shares how Julie uses her knowledge of the stable self to prevent mania from taking over her life.

Choosing Bipolar Stability

Recognizing Signs of Bipolar Stability

Mania: Am I Having Too Much Fun?

Bipolar takes you to the top of the mountain and then drops you with no safety net. The goal is management and ultimately prevention. People need a lot of help along the way. Let’s be kind to ourselves. Bipolar is an illness. It’s not intentional and it can be managed. Two steps forward and one step back is still progress!

What to Do When Managing Bipolar Disorder is Really, Really Hard

Bipolar Disorder & Allowing Yourself Time To Recover

The Bipolar Phoenix: Rise From The Ashes & Keep Going

It’s impossible to manage bipolar disorder in a void. Like any illness, people with bipolar disorder need support. Asking for this support can be difficult, but it’s the best way to counter the isolation that often comes with bipolar mood swings.

Helping Loved ones Help you Through Mood Episodes

How to Explain Your Bipolar Disorder to Friends & Family

Audience

Resources

Once you have a basic understanding of bipolar disorder as an illness, it’s time to examine how it affects you personally. The audience pages on this website share Julie’s comprehensive experience in helping not only those diagnosed with bipolar disorder, but the family members, partners, friends, healthcare professionals, researchers and journalists who are impacted by or interested in bipolar disorder symptoms and behaviors. The trusted and well researched information in the audience sections of this website share Julie’s specific plans for your individual needs.

Get

Social

Julie’s Instagram page offers education and research on the topics of bipolar and psychotic disorders. She regularly shares her own experiences living with bipolar disorder and a paranoid psychotic disorder. The topics include the impact of mania on relationships, sleep management, talking with others about bipolar mood swings, work, school, disability, depression, signs of psychosis and what we can do to manage the unpleasant symptoms of bipolar including irritation and focus problems.

Client

Testimonials

Julie’s books changed everything I thought about my bipolar diagnosis. I learned from her. She taught me what to do. Julie is the only writer who understands US because she lives with what we live with. We SEE her struggle and keep going. She writes from life and it helps us live our lives. Julie’s life and writings are the biggest inspiration I found to help live through my diagnosis.

Julie is as fascinated with the research literature on bipolar disorder as any of the most diligent psychiatric residents I’ve taught. She inhales the stuff: any article I might send along, she’s grabbed and added to her broad knowledge.

You can tell I’m a fan. I’ve been referring people to her books for years: my own patients, and readers of my website, PsychEducation.org. Like Ms. Fast, I’ve written a lot about bipolar disorders. But my stuff is academic, full of research references. Julie’s books are almost the opposite: hard-won knowledge that comes from having had the symptoms, had the episodes, lived through the consequences. And from personal experimentation, trying strategy after strategy for coping, for anticipating problems, for avoiding pitfalls. From all that, she distills masterful “tricks of the trade”.

Thank you for putting so much energy into helping caregivers cope with their loved ones’ bipolar disorder. It does take a team to help our child. I am eternally thankful for your books and services. I have a better understanding of this difficult and confusing illness.

Your books, blogs, and writings on this subject have helped saved our family. Our son has really had a rough time. His dad often feel so upset about our son’s diagnosis and symptoms. As parents we felt hopeless until we found you. Now his dad the one who gets in there and helps our kid during the worst of times. You are an inspiration.

I so appreciate the clear and reliable information you share. It makes a huge difference in my relationship. I was frantic until I found your work. I thought my hubby would be sick forever. I had NO idea what to do when he was hospitalized and diagnosed and then I found you! Thank you Julie. For everything. For literally saving my relationship. You are the only person who understands how complex and life changing this can be. You lived it and have it. You don’t discount the fear and worry and the impact it has on everyone around the illness. We need you Julie! I know what to do now and how to talk to my kids about their dad’s illness.

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