Dear V.,
Well, you asked, and you may not like my answer, but read it as if I am speaking to you very kindly, because thatis what I am going to do... be kind and truthful.
My daughter in law was bipolar and yes, it is very hard on the person who is bipolar, and the whole family. For one thing, your feelings and wishes are driven lots of time by the bipolar disorder.
It causes you to feel an exaggeratedly heightened sense of loss or loneliness, or whatever it is - missing your children. I miss my children every day and think about the wonderful times when they were living nearby, that is just the way that life is. What about the mothers who have lost their sons and daughters in Iraq.
You need to develop ....and you can....a method of telling yourself that other people have problems too, and they need to be respected and cared for just the way that you want to be respected and cared for. Say it to yourself over and over until you really have it in your heart and soul.
For one thing, when you were ready to leave your mother's home, you probably didn't know how much she missed you. Noone knows how much mothers suffer - unless they are a mother with exactly the same situation facing them. It is hard and painful and difficult to be a mother. We love our children the way that God loves us. ....and He does not lock us up and tell us what to do ...he sets us free to be ourselves and to honor him because we do respect and love Him.
You are so lucky to have had that good time with your husband..now he is older and he has problems too. He is not talking about them, he is working them out, and in a very natural and safe way - I understanding that fishing is very soothing and cleansing, even feeds you and your family and makes it possible for a person to have a cooling off time, just like he said inbetween work and home.
In my work life I never did have a job that was soothing or smooth and satisfying - there was always some sort of tension and problem going on that caused worry and fretting. So he is trying to be the best person he can be. Just have a good dinner waiting for him, without complaining, and try to understand yourself. You can go online and read about the bipolar symptoms and find a blog where people with bipolar disorder can be supportive to you. They will truly truly understand you and give you guidance toward a more comfortable life for yourself and your family.
....and for goodness sake please take your meds that is the best thing that you can do for yourself and your family at this time. They will stabilize you and give you a chance to think more clearly and give you some peace.
I have to take a lot of medicine too. It is for high blood pressure and it makes you tire more quickly and be slower and it keeps you from having a stroke and dying. So I just put up with being tired and am very grateful that there are medications like that for me. There were no blood pressure medicines when my father needed them. He died at 50 years old and here I am 76 and counting, only because of the new medicines that they have discovered since he was alive.
Life is complicated and difficult, isn't it? But thanks to God we get through it. C. N.