You are not “a problem.” You are a person. At BrightLife Behavioral Health, we provide respectful, evidence-based support for mental health and substance use challenges. Below are some of the conditions we can help with.
Clinical depression — also called major depressive disorder — is more than sadness. It affects how you think, feel, and function. It can make you feel hopeless, numb, or tired all the time. You may stop enjoying things you used to love. The future can feel closed. Depression is real, and it is treatable. We can help.
Bipolar disorder involves shifts in mood, energy, sleep, and behavior. Bipolar I includes episodes of severe mania and depression. Bipolar II includes hypomania (a lighter form of mania) along with depression. Cyclothymic disorder is a long-term pattern of mood instability. With the right plan, people can stabilize and live with control.
Anxiety disorders cause intense, persistent worry or fear that can feel impossible to turn off. Panic attacks can feel like you’re losing control. You may start avoiding situations just to stop the anxiety. This is common, it is real, and it can be treated so you can get your day back.
BPD affects how you see yourself and other people. It can create intense emotions, fear of being abandoned, sudden mood shifts, and unstable relationships. You may feel “too much, all at once,” and people may not understand. BPD is serious, but not hopeless. Many people improve with structured therapy and support.
PTSD can follow a traumatic or terrifying experience. It can involve flashbacks, nightmares, high alertness, and intrusive memories. If symptoms last or get worse over time and make daily life hard, you may have PTSD. Treatment can reduce the intensity and help you feel safe again.
ADHD affects attention, impulse control, and activity level. It can look like restlessness, racing thoughts, getting overwhelmed by tasks, interrupting, forgetting, or struggling to stay organized. It can affect school, work, relationships, and self-esteem. ADHD is real, common, and manageable.
Psychosis is when your connection to reality is disrupted. It may include hallucinations (seeing or hearing things others don’t) or delusions (strong beliefs not based in reality). It can be frightening and isolating. Psychosis always needs fast, professional care.
Substance Use Disorder is a medical condition where someone keeps using alcohol, nicotine, or other substances even when it’s causing damage to health, work, or relationships. Over time, the brain can start to depend on the substance just to feel “normal.” Cravings and withdrawal are real. Addiction is not a moral failure. It’s treatable.
You don't have to handle this alone.
Speak with someone who will take you seriously and listen without judgment.
Call +1 (614) 681-0012