Bipolar Happens! is the #1 Bipolar Disorder Book on the Kindle!

BHenhanced  65Bipolar Happens: 35 Tips and Tricks to Manage Bipolar Disorder is the #1 Bipolar Disorder Book on the Kindle!

That’s exciting. I went to the Kindle store to see how Loving Someone with Bipolar Disorder and Take Charge of Bipolar Disorder were doing on the bipolar disorder page. These books are in the top ten ranking- and then I saw that Bipolar Happens! was #1.

Fantastic! Bipolar Happens! is an enjoyable book about a serious topic.

Guess what- it’s only $.99 I want it to be available to everyone.

Yes, I think this is a great deal and a good way to get helpful information about bipolar disorder at minimum cost. Bipolar Happens! was my first book. I knew I wanted to talk about how I manage the illness, but I also wanted to tell stories about how it affects my life daily.

There are stories about anger, manic spending, anxiety at a baseball game and what it feels like to be psychotic! It’s a book that family members love too. I love it myself. It’s hopeful.

Click here to go to amazon.com. You can read part of the book and then add it to your Kindle. Wow, $.99!

Julie

PS: If you’re new to my work, this is a great way to experience my writing style and the quality of my information. If you like it, you can come back for more.

1 comment to Bipolar Happens! is the #1 Bipolar Disorder Book on the Kindle!

  • AKSusan

    Hey Julie,
    An unrelated question for you. Do you have any thoughts about female hormones/menopause and Bipolar? I’ve been put on a progesterone supplement, and it does seem to have helped a little bit, although it has by no means eliminated my depression or mania. I’m wondering if you’ve heard other women say anything about perimenopause.

    What I am afraid of is finding a stigma against menopause-aged women with bipolar. It is NOT all in the hormones, but I’m worried that it may be easy for people to dismiss the problem as such. It would be like before PMS was recognized as a real, biological issue rather than “just in your head” as it used to be considered by the medical community. Sort of the “hysterical female” concept of old.

    Have you got any thoughts about this?
    Susan