Success and happiness are two different things

As my handle states, I’m a lawyer. Even worse, I’m a litigator– I go to court a lot, file lawsuits, get high on the charge of arguing my case before a judge or a jury. I handle a blend of straightforward and more complex cases, and it’s the complicated ones that I really love. It’s how I get to show my smarts, prove my abilities, and feel recognized, acknowledged for my talents. I aspire to be a well-known, scary smart litigator on the cover of SuperLawyers and reported in the Top Verdicts and Settlements report every year. I want to be queen of my corner of the legal world.Actually, that’s not true. Or more accurately, I should say that this whole paragraph should have been written in the past tense, except for the “I’m a lawyer” part. And maybe not even that. Because I am realizing that the way I chose my online handle, BipolarLawyerCook, has more meaning in the order of the words than I could have thought.

See, Bipolar comes first. It’s taken me a while to realize this, despite the fact that I type my online handle nearly every day. Let me repeat that. Bipolar comes first. It doesn’t mean that I walk around with a big scarlet B attached to my coat. What it does mean is that I need to take my bipolar into consideration when I am making decisions about what will keep me healthy, and therefore happy. If I ignore my hard-acquired self-knowledge about my triggers, my mental knee-jerk habits, if I fail to avoid people, places, and situations that back me into a corner where I curl up into a little ball, and just give up, then all I am is bipolar, and worse, a crazy bipolar. If I remember, and adapt, then there is plenty of room for any other descriptors I want to tag on after bipolar– so long as the terms can all coexist with bipolar, and take turns as need be.

When I was first diagnosed, eons ago in 2005, I was relieved– finally, an explanation, and one that did not implicate some moral weakness on my part. I started taking my meds, went religiously to therapy, worked on my triggers, was a model patient. But not really– because I made the mistake of believing that I would now be able to do all the things I’d wanted to, but couldn’t. Despite knowing better, I assumed that the meds and the therapy would cure me, and that I could do whatever I set my now-stable mind to.

Not so– the meds control, don’t cure. If I overtax myself, then all my crazy predispositions come roaring back. But more importantly, and fortunately without quite the same variety of mental ups and downs, I am finally coming to realize that litigation as a practice is mostly insane. Whether or not you’re officially crazy, the pace, the hours, the adversarial climate and lack of civility are all enough to drive the sanest person nuts. And I’m realizing that it does drive everyone crazy, eventually. Maybe you become a screamer, or a drunk, or you cheat on your spouse, or your kids hate you because you were never home, or your colleagues and opponents will never give you a break because you never give them one– there are a thousand different ways to fail as a person, if not so obviously as a litigator.

I recently took some time off, since I needed to switch mood stabilizers, was exhausted and depressed, and was therefore on the brink of messing something up again at work. The time off has been a revelation in more than one way. First, I’ve had even more ideas to write, and took the leap to start pitching ideas for freelance assignments. Second, I realized that the charge that I get from the ritualized combat of litigation comes with a price, and that I was ignoring the law of mental gravity: what comes up must come down. Add to that the slow dawning acceptance that my energy reserves are shallow, and I’ve come to accept that my flame burns bright, but burns out quickly. I need to find work that is more sustainable, less full press– and to do that, I need to give up my Queen Litigator dreams. This became less difficult when I had my third realization, while lunching with a coworker, who was stressed beyond belief. I didn’t want to go back– and not just to that office. Worries about the future aside, I was happy.

I was sharing this with my therapist, and she asked me who I was proving myself to with my SuperLawyer fantasy. When I realized that I was trying to get approval from those who will never give it, it because so much easier to step to the side, and understand that my dreams of worldly success would not make me happy, even if I had the mental resources to achieve them. I also realized that setting aside the fantasy isn’t failure, no matter what other litigators might think.

Having realized this, it becomes easier to think about walking away from the practice of litigation, or to at least think in a more clear-eyed manner about what will make me happy, and how I can best sustain that happiness. In compiling my list of things that make me happy, I’ve come up with: cooking, taking pictures, being with friends, writing for writing’s sake, having quiet time to myself, blogging for sharing’s sake, having quiet time with my husband, reading everything in sight, learning new things, and helping other people learn new things. I’m looking forward to adding more things to that listand maybe more and different things to my handle.

Republished from BipolarLawyerCook.

Posted by bipolarlawyer on February 4th, 2008
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7 Comments a “Success and happiness are two different things”

  1. Mariposa says:

    I read this in your site…but I’m posting my thorough comment here…and you don’t have to guess why. :)

    Your post made me cry…the one that starts from tears welled up in my eyes to sobbing…and I’m at work…so I had to run to the bathroom…LOL

    But I’m fine now.

    This post made me see flashes of scenes in my life…like you, I have stepped aside…left a world I used to enjoy because I chose to take care of myself…I had been fine…and now…I’m here again…creating another world…doing a race against myself…and this post made me stop…and re-audit myself.

    And yes, you are right, setting aside the fantasy is no failure at all…in fact, only the best of breeds and best in class are capable of doing that! You inspire me today…and as I’ve said in your main blog…I’m SO proud of YOU!

  2. katjhar says:

    I really needed to read this today. You articulated what I’ve also been struggling with since my diagnosis: that despite the best efforts of myself and modern medicine, I will never be ‘cured’ of being bipolar.

    I’ve been railing against changing my life/hopes/ambitions because of bipolar, choosing to believe instead that with the right blend of meds/therapy/diet & exercise, I can do anything.

    It does hurt to believe that this might not be so, that I may never have the success that I dreamed of, but given the choice of being happy and able to make others so is infinitely more important.

  3. aaryn b. says:

    wow.
    heavy.
    and incredibly important.
    i think the lesson you’re learning, though specific because of your diagnosis, is applicable to a much more general audience. thank you for sharing.

  4. jessica says:

    This sounds great to me. I sort of did something similiar, when I realized that though I loved working in the outdoors, it took away some of the magic that it reserved just for being in it. Made my haven disappear. And when I found the job I am currently in…working with severely physically disabled adults, who are also mentally disabled, I realized that I love it so much. Maybe in a different way, but the love is there. And I am happy in it. And maybe….as I continue, I’ll be able to accept the fact that bipolar comes first too.

    Thank you for this post. And I hope your handle grows in leaps and bounds.

  5. moonflower says:

    i want to stand up and do a cheerleader-type dance including the singy songs :)

    bravo for you, i bet you’ll be adding way lots more to that list. people who walk our type of paths are not without great strength and great courage. funny that the world thinks the opposite eh?

    much love to you,
    moonflower

  6. Angelina says:

    I have had to come to very similar realizations and quite recently. A lot of people were bummed that I walked away from the company I spent almost four years creating, they were bummed that I closed the retail store I tried to make a success of, and they are bummed that I don’t have any professional ambitions because to them that seems like I’ve given up my soul.

    The truth is that my mental illness makes it very challenging to go out in the world to make my living and also be happy. My happiness is here at home, as a homemaker. My peers largely don’t understand this. I’m a writer but I don’t feel I need to publish a book to feel pride in my writing.

    I realized that the healthiest life for me is tending my garden, doing homesteading activities and writing about it all.

    When people ask my why I closed my store I tell them “because it was very bad for my mental health”

    I am so happy to hear that you are brave enough to be looking at (and reaching for) the life that offers you the sanest and happiest path.

  7. Scott says:

    In trying to make sure that bipolar comes first, what do we who have the disease do to have successful (conventionally granted) lives? I have two master’s degrees, a 31 year history of successfully working in just about everything, and an internship in my profession, which is library science. I am in an area in which that market is oversaturated. When I do reach out for help, I get the impression that the agency or person perceives me as an ungrateful child. I even told my Psychiatrist, “show me how to successfully live under the duress of the disease, or show me how to go on disability.” I am at my whit’s end. I have considered taking my savings and becoming an X-ray technician; at least then I could support myself and not feel like a burden to society. Unfortunately for the mentally ill, the Federal government has steadily chipped away at the support network we did have prior to the 80’s. I see this situation as an enormous waste of human energy and potential. What are your thoughts?

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