Searching for Brighter Days
Learning to Manage My Bipolar Brain
Karen's everyday family life was filled with alcoholism and violence, but things only became more difficult when, at the age of seventeen, she began her battle with anxiety and depression.
Growing up in a deprived area of North East England in the 1970's, alcoholism and violence played a huge role in Karen's everyday family life. But things were only to become more difficult when, at the age of seventeen, she began her battle with anxiety and depression, an illness nobody recognised. At times feeling as though she was locked inside her own mind, Karen tried to make sense of her heightened and intense emotions. Her reality became a devastating, deteriorating state of existence, and no one seemed to understand what was happening to her. A number of harrowing, recurrent and often bizarre episodes - including a phantom pregnancy, a nightclub assault, and an unhealthy obsession with a celebrity - eventually lead to Karen being sectioned under the mental health act and taken into hospital. It then took years and many more dramatic relapses before doctors would finally give her the correct diagnosis of bipolar disorder. This is a no-holds-barred, inspirational true story of how, despite losses and difficulties along the way, Karen Manton learned to manage her illness, stay out of hospital, and find those 'brighter days'.
Karen Manton was born in Grangetown, Middlesbrough, in the North East of England. From leaving school she worked for the local authority. Having suffered from bipolar disorder since the age of 17, Karen retired at a very young age due to ill health. She later returned to work in social care, but after suffering further ill health, resigned from her post. She then decided to write her life story, Searching For Brighter Days: Learning to Manage My Bipolar Brain. Karen is continuing to help others with mental illness by speaking out on various radio stations, writing magazine articles and blogs, and partaking in podcast interviews. Karen is also training as a peer support worker.