How to Keep a Mood Diary

A mood diary does exactly what it says on the tin – you record how you are feeling, so you can keep track of your mood changes. You can also keep a track of your meds, your sleep, food, triggers, day to day stressors, successes, and self care.

  • A mood diary can work as an early warning system for depressive, hypomanic and manic mood swings.
  • It can be helpful to have a record of your mental health to share with your doctors and health care team.
  • Filling in your mood diary can act as a reminder to check in with yourself and how you are feeling.
  • My diary also helps me remember to take my meds.
  • You don’t have to do it everyday – do it as often as you feel you need to.
https://www.bipolaruk.org/faqs/track-your-mood-scale
  • You can use the Bipolar UK mood scale to monitor and record your moods.

Example

“Today I feel low, maybe a 4 sometimes dipping to a 3. Got 6 hours sleep – restless. Took meds last night and this morning. Work has been tough this week so I feel quite stressed. I have done 20 minutes of yoga and had a bath to relax.”

Of course you can write it however you want – it’s your bipolar survival tool – make it work for you.

There may be days when you are not feeling well enough to keep up with your diary – that’s okay, you can return to it and backdate how you’ve been feeling later on.

Resources

You can use the Bipolar UK mood diary template https://www.bipolaruk.org/FAQs/track-your-mood-diary

There is also the great Mood Tracker App from Bipolar UK and Andrew Thompson – I use this myself and find the daily notifications a great prompt to check in with how I’m feeling and take my meds. https://www.bipolaruk.org/blog/track-your-mood-app

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Connect with me on social media or comment below. Do you have a mood diary? How do you organise it?

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Useful Links:

https://www.bipolaruk.org

3 responses to “How to Keep a Mood Diary”

  1. […] is essential that you educate yourself on your illness. Track your moods, keep a mood diary, and learn your […]

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  2. […] I suffer with hypomania, which is less intense and damaging than mania. On the mood scale I am usually a 7 or 8. When I’m a high 8 I start taking anti-psychotics alongside my mood […]

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  3. […] action.  I find the Bipolar UK mood scale helps me observe and understand my mood levels. Keeping a diary of your mood score can give you invaluable […]

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