Bipolar Disorder & Mania Treatment in Norwich, CT

Mania doesn't always look like a crisis. From the inside, it can feel like finally being yourself — sharper, faster, more certain. You don't need as much sleep and you don't miss it. You're full of ideas, and they all seem good. You feel productive in a way that's almost intoxicating. But there's a difference between a great week and a manic episode, and that line gets blurry when you're in it. It's usually the people around you who notice first. And when the episode ends — however it ends — the aftermath can be disorienting in ways nobody talks about enough.

Bipolar mania treatment in Norwich CT

Impulsivity, Grandiosity, and the Energy That Feels Like a Gift

During a manic or hypomanic episode, the brain's reward systems are running hot. Decisions that would normally give you pause — a big purchase, a confrontation, a new project you absolutely can't wait to start — feel not just reasonable but obvious. That's grandiosity at work: a quiet, certain sense that you see things others don't, that you're operating at a higher level. And maybe you are, in some ways. But impulsivity is riding alongside it, and it doesn't ask for permission. You might say something you can't take back, spend money you don't have, or commit to things that collapse when the energy does. It isn't a character flaw. It's neurobiology.

When the Episode Ends — and What Gets Left Behind

The crash after a manic episode isn't just exhaustion. Sometimes there's a depressive episode that follows, which can feel especially brutal after the high. And beyond the mood shift, there's often a kind of reckoning — looking back at what happened during the episode and trying to make sense of it. Relationships to repair, decisions to untangle, maybe embarrassment about things you said or did. That part of bipolar disorder doesn't get talked about enough. It's real, and it's hard. But it's also something you can work through, especially with consistent psychiatric support that knows your full history.

Getting a Proper Bipolar Evaluation at Elite Health

If you're in Norwich — or anywhere in Connecticut — and you're wondering whether what you're experiencing might be bipolar disorder, the first step is a thorough psychiatric evaluation. With Sindhia Shyras, APRN, that means a real conversation about your mood history, not just a checklist. When did your mood patterns start? What did your highest-energy periods actually look like? What about the lows? Has anyone in your family been diagnosed with a mood disorder? These questions build a picture that a brief office visit often can't. Telehealth appointments are available throughout Connecticut, so you can get that evaluation without having to travel far from Norwich.

Common Questions

Honestly? Not always — and that's one of the reasons bipolar disorder can go unrecognized for so long. Hypomania especially can feel like your best self. You're energetic, creative, socially confident, and you don't need as much sleep. It can feel like a superpower. Full mania is usually more disruptive — the thoughts race faster than you can catch them, and things can spiral quickly — but even then, there's often an initial phase that feels exhilarating. The problem isn't the feeling itself. It's that it isn't sustainable, and what follows is often the opposite of that energy. Recognizing the full cycle is part of understanding what's happening.

Lifestyle factors — sleep consistency, stress management, avoiding alcohol, maintaining a regular schedule — can absolutely support stability, and they're worth taking seriously. But for most people with bipolar disorder, especially bipolar I, medication plays a significant role in preventing episodes and reducing their severity. The research on this is pretty clear. That said, medication decisions are made together with you — based on your type of bipolar, your history, and your concerns. Nobody's going to push a medication on you. But it's worth going into it with an open mind, because the right regimen can genuinely change your quality of life.

Elite Health LLC offers both. The office is located at 1 Liberty Sq, Ste 301 in New Britain, CT — which is about a 45-minute drive from Norwich if you'd prefer to come in person. But most patients in Norwich choose telehealth, which works well for ongoing psychiatric care. Either way, you're getting the same level of attention from Sindhia Shyras, APRN. Many people actually find telehealth easier to stick with consistently, and consistency matters a lot in bipolar management.

Let's Talk About What You're Experiencing

You don't have to have it all figured out before you reach out. A conversation with Sindhia Shyras, APRN is a good place to start — no pressure, no judgment.

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Or call us at 860-515-8689

Elite Health LLC