2009 Casey Medal Winner, Magazine: “Growing Up Bipolar” (Q&A)

Michelle Parks & Mary Carmichael:

How did you conceive the idea for the project?
At first, my editors and I were interested in childhood bipolar disorder simply because it’s a controversial topic — there’s a lot of debate about how the disorder should be diagnosed and whether it even exists in kids. But then I found that most of what had already been written was focused on either the academic side of the controversy — [such as] what is the definition of pediatric bipolar disorder — or the dangers of medicating kids. There weren’t many vivid descriptions of the actual experience of being, or raising, a child with the diagnosis. So I decided I wanted to bridge that gap — to show as well as tell, to force the reader to think through the difficult decisions that parents have to make instead of just saying “parents of these kids have to make tough decisions.”
I thought the best way to do it would be to zoom in on one family, to give the reader someone with whom to identify. I knew the Blakes were the right family when Amy [Max’s mother] said to me in our first interview that “no one understands how it feels” to raise a child like Max — after all, the whole purpose of the project was to show people how that feels.