Hello...He was diagnosed as a manic depressive many years ago. So when he was up he was UP and when he was down there was such depth it would take all my strength to get him up again. Simon had lost sight of his swings in the last month or so.I remember saying to him 3-4 weeks ago that I felt he should review his medication as it wasn't working, his mood swings were getting faster and more extreme. He couldn't see that he was on the rollercoaster. I braced myself any time he was in a good mood because for me it was only a matter of time until he went down and hard. He had gotten to the point where in my opinion depression is it's most dangerous. Where the person suffering can't distinguish any difference in their mood or their actions. If you can't see you're about to drive into a brick wall how are you meant to avoid it, you know?
But over the last few weeks we have been so busy and so stressed with moving and assorted other trivial things that I stopped paying attention to it. But as I said...it was his battle to fight, I could never win it for him


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