John Jeremiah Ahearne

COUNSELLING AND PSYCHOTHERAPY IN Angel Islington, HOLBORN,

Bond Street, Harley STreet, Cavendish Square, oxford street, and Marylebone


Understanding Bipolar Disorder Through a Pluralistic Lens

Approaching bipolar disorder through a pluralistic lens offers a more holistic and compassionate understanding of what it means to live with extreme shifts in mood, energy, and emotional intensity. Rather than committing to one fixed therapeutic path, a pluralistic approach values diversity in both experience and treatment. It recognises that each individual has unique needs and that these needs may change over time. Within this framework, different therapeutic modalities — such as medication, cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), dialectical behaviour therapy (DBT), psychodynamic work, and even more systemic approaches like constellation therapy — can be integrated and adapted to provide support at different points in the person’s journey.

Pluralism values what works for the individual. Where CBT might offer structured tools to manage depressive thoughts or early signs of mania, DBT provides vital techniques for emotional regulation, distress tolerance, and interpersonal effectiveness — skills particularly helpful for those who struggle with impulsivity or mood instability. Psychodynamic therapy, in contrast, creates space to explore the deeper emotional roots of a person’s experience, including early relational patterns and unconscious beliefs about self and others. In a pluralistic approach, these therapies are not seen as competing, but as complementary—different ways of engaging with the person’s story.

For people living with bipolar disorder, the shifts between mania and depression are rarely just chemical events. Through a psychodynamic or meaning-oriented perspective, these episodes may also reflect internal struggles: mania as a defence against despair or low self-worth, depression as an expression of grief, guilt, or emotional overload. A pluralistic therapist may explore these dynamics while also supporting practical needs—such as improving sleep, setting routines, or strengthening family support.

Therapy becomes a space not only for managing symptoms but also for making sense of them.

The therapeutic relationship is central across all modalities. Whether working in a behavioural, systemic, or psychodynamic style, the therapist offers a steady, non-judgemental presence. Through this relationship, individuals may begin to experience safety in vulnerability, or to rewrite internal stories shaped by past trauma or neglect. Within a pluralistic framework, the nature of the relationship can shift as needed—from supportive and containing during crisis, to reflective and exploratory when the person feels more stable.

Timing and flexibility are key. During a manic episode, the priority might be safety, containment, and stabilisation — possibly involving medication adjustment, crisis planning, or short-term behavioural strategies. When the person is more grounded, the focus may widen to include deeper emotional work, psychoeducation, or relational healing. A pluralistic approach accommodates these shifts. It’s not about sticking rigidly to one model, but about tuning in to what feels most helpful, accessible, and meaningful at a given time.

Importantly, pluralism also invites us to consider the person’s relationship to their diagnosis. Being told one has bipolar disorder can bring both relief and fear, clarity and shame. Some may welcome the explanation, while others feel boxed in or stigmatised. Rather than imposing a singular narrative, a pluralistic approach makes space for these mixed feelings. It encourages the person to define what the diagnosis means for them and to explore how it fits (or doesn’t fit) into their understanding of who they are.

Over time, a pluralistic approach supports more than symptom control — it fosters growth, resilience, and self-knowledge. Someone might begin by learning to manage their triggers with CBT, deepen their understanding of family dynamics through constellation work, build emotional capacity through DBT skills, and then reflect on their identity and values in a longer-term psychodynamic process. Each of these experiences contributes something meaningful to the whole. There is no single path through bipolar disorder, and pluralism honours that.

Family and systemic support are also valued in this approach. Many individuals with bipolar disorder live in complex relational systems that shape and are shaped by their illness. Constellation therapy and family-based interventions can uncover intergenerational patterns, unresolved grief, or loyalty conflicts that may influence emotional stability. In some cases, bringing family members into the therapeutic process can ease communication, reduce shame, and build a shared understanding of how best to support one another.

Medication remains a cornerstone of care for many, particularly in managing the biological rhythms of bipolar disorder. But even here, a pluralistic stance can help. Rather than seeing medication as a cure or a failure, it becomes one tool among many — a foundation that supports the person in engaging more fully in therapy and life. The key is collaboration: involving the person in decisions about their care, and respecting their preferences, values, and lived experiences.

In essence, a pluralistic lens reframes treatment as a partnership. It shifts the focus from “What’s the right method?” to “What matters most to you, right now?” That question lies at the heart of this approach. It acknowledges that healing is not linear, and that therapy is most effective when it listens, adapts, and responds to the evolving nature of a person’s life.

For individuals with bipolar disorder, this kind of therapy can be both stabilising and liberating. It offers the freedom to explore different parts of oneself, the structure to navigate crisis, and the support to move forward with a deeper sense of agency. Through the pluralistic lens, therapy is not just about managing illness — it’s about reconnecting with hope, identity, and meaning across all phases of recovery


© John Jeremiah Ahearne

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