Understanding Bipolar Disorder
Bipolar disorder is a mood condition characterized by significant mood episodes – typically alternating periods of depression and hypomania or mania. Bipolar I is defined by the presence of at least one full manic episode; Bipolar II involves hypomanic episodes alternating with depressive episodes. Both types involve depressive episodes that can be severe and prolonged, and both significantly affect functioning, relationships, and quality of life. Bipolar disorder is a chronic condition that requires long-term management. Medication is the cornerstone of treatment and is usually necessary for effective symptom management. Psychological therapy does not replace medication for bipolar disorder – it works alongside it, providing tools for recognizing early warning signs of mood episodes, managing the psychological and relational dimensions of the condition, and building a life that supports stability.

Therapists Offering Bipolar Disorder Support
About Bipolar Disorder Therapy
Why seek therapy?
People with bipolar disorder seek therapy for a range of reasons: to develop skills for recognizing and managing the early warning signs of mood episodes, to process the grief of the diagnosis and its implications, to rebuild relationships damaged by manic or depressive episodes, to manage the depression that is often the most persistent feature, or to develop strategies for maintaining stability while still living a full and meaningful life.
How therapy helps
Therapy for bipolar disorder draws on Psychoeducation, CBT for Bipolar (CBT-BP), Interpersonal and Social Rhythm Therapy (IPSRT), and Family-Focused Therapy. Psychoeducation provides comprehensive understanding of the condition. CBT-BP addresses the cognitive patterns that both trigger and accompany mood episodes. IPSRT focuses on maintaining regular daily routines – sleep, eating, activity – that support mood stability.
Benefits of Bipolar Disorder Therapy
Early Warning Sign Recognition
One of the most powerful things therapy provides for people with bipolar disorder is the ability to recognize early warning signs of mood episodes – the subtle shifts that precede full episodes – and intervene before they escalate.
Managing the Depression
Depression is often the most persistent and impairing feature of bipolar disorder, and it responds to specific evidence-based psychological approaches. Therapy provides tools for managing depressive episodes that complement medication management.
Building a Stable, Meaningful Life
Bipolar disorder is a lifelong condition – and living well with it requires building a life that supports stability: regular routines, meaningful activity, strong relationships, and the self-knowledge to navigate the condition’s challenges.
Medication manages bipolar disorder. Therapy helps you live well with it.
Start Feeling Better.
Our Hamilton therapists provide specialized psychological support for bipolar disorder alongside medical management. No referral needed. Book online or call (905) 962-2220. Evening and weekend appointments available in person in Hamilton or online anywhere in Ontario.
Our Approach to Bipolar Disorder Therapy
Bipolar disorder therapy at Empire is provided as a psychological adjunct to medical management – working collaboratively with your prescribing physician or psychiatrist rather than in isolation from the medical dimension of your care.
Psychoeducation is a primary early component – ensuring that you have comprehensive, accurate understanding of bipolar disorder, its triggers, its patterns, and the full range of management strategies available.
CBT-BP addresses the cognitive patterns associated with both manic and depressive episodes, builds recognition of early warning signs, and develops specific intervention strategies for the early stages of mood episodes.
IPSRT focuses on the role of social rhythms – regular patterns of sleep, eating, activity, and social interaction – in maintaining mood stability. The relational and identity dimensions of living with bipolar disorder are addressed throughout.

Common Questions About Bipolar Disorder Therapy
Do I still need medication if I am in therapy?
For bipolar disorder, medication is typically necessary and is the cornerstone of effective treatment. Therapy does not replace medication – it works alongside it. The combination of medication and therapy typically produces better outcomes than either alone.
I was recently diagnosed with bipolar disorder. What should I expect from therapy?
Therapy following a new bipolar diagnosis typically begins with psychoeducation – building comprehensive understanding of the condition – and then moves to developing the skills and strategies for managing it effectively.
Can therapy prevent mood episodes?
Therapy can reduce the frequency and severity of episodes by teaching early detection and coping strategies.
My manic episodes have damaged important relationships. Can therapy help repair those?
Yes. Processing the aftermath of manic episodes – the shame, the relational damage – is an important therapeutic focus. Couples or family therapy may also be relevant for the relational repair dimension.
Is a referral required?
No. You can book directly online or by calling (905) 962-2220.
History of Bipolar Disorder Treatment
Evolution of Treatment
The psychological treatment of bipolar disorder has developed significantly alongside advances in pharmacological management. The development of Psychoeducation, CBT for bipolar, and Interpersonal and Social Rhythm Therapy since the 1990s has produced evidence-based psychological adjuncts to medication that significantly improve outcomes.
A Modern Approach in Canada
Current best practice in Canada combines medication management with evidence-based psychological therapy – typically Psychoeducation, CBT-BP, and/or IPSRT. The goal is not just symptom management but the development of a full, meaningful life alongside the management of a chronic condition.
A full life alongside bipolar disorder is possible. Therapy helps you build it.
Ready to Take the Next Step?
No referral needed. Our Hamilton therapists provide specialized psychological support for bipolar disorder. Book online today or call (905) 962-2220. Evening and weekend appointments available in person in Hamilton or online anywhere in Ontario.