Interview by John Crace 

Ellen Forney’s Marbles: Mania, Depression, Michelangelo & Me – in pictures

Ellen Forney's Marbles: Mania, Depression, Michelangelo & Me is a deeply personal graphic memoir of her bipolar disorder
  
  


Ellen Forney: 6
'Throughout my 20s I had moderately extended ­periods of a more or less good mood and moderately extended periods of more or less down moods that ­became increasingly distinct from one another. But I didn’t ­really progress to a state that could be considered an episode or a disorder ­until I was about 28' Photograph: Ellen Forney
Ellen Forney: 2
'I didn’t want to start work on something so sensitive and personal until I’d had some time to trust my recovery' Photograph: Ellen Forney
Ellen Forney: 3
'Like most people with a mental ­illness, I’m only too aware of the ­fragility of my emotional state; Photograph: Ellen Forney
Ellen Forney: 4
'Stopping a drug regime that appeared to be working, even if it was only coincidentally, was not a chance that I felt I could afford to take. The possibility of relapsing into manic depressive mood swings was unbearable' Photograph: Ellen Forney
Ellen Forney: 5
'The ­depressions were certainly more ­painful for me to experience and for friends and loved ones to witness' Photograph: Ellen Forney
Ellen Forney: 1
'The euphoric parts were ­amazing. Colours felt vivid and ­vibrant; the world felt fascinating and interconnected – and I felt powerful, sexy, and full of love and curiosity. But I was also insatiable, impatient, compulsive and restless. I cringe now at how offputting to other people I might have been' Photograph: Ellen Forney
Ellen Forney: 7
Over four years, ­Forney tried different doses of various drugs, including lithium, clonazepam and lamotrigine; some had little or no effect, some had unpleasant side-effects, such as bringing her out in acne or lowering her blood count. ­Others were just too expensive in the US Photograph: Ellen Forney
 

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