Hey all, I have a question.
I don't usually post, but I'm in such a quagmire that I need some solid input on what to do. My first MEPS visit is in a week, and I'm struggling with my past medical history, and what I need to put on the sheet (Or what I should put)
My basic situation is this... When I was 8 or so, my parents divorced and I was taken to a doctor after acting out in school (In second grade). They said I had depression, so they medicated me. I took anti-depressants until I was 15. The medicine didn't change the way I was behaving, so in the ever ready quest to find out what was wrong with me, one psych diagnosed me with BIPOLAR DISORDER. I took medicine for that until I was 15 too. When I turned 15, we started to wonder why the hell I was taking all this medication, and had some evaluations done, including some fancy brain scans and other actual tests. The conclusion was pretty unanimous, that I never had bipolar... nothing even near it. I stopped taking meds immediately, as well as depression meds (that diagnosis still stood), and I have not taken any medicine since. Further investigation has revealed the doctor that diagnosed me with bipolar himself had bipolar... and at the time unbeknownst to us was operating under an invalid medical license...
I am now 23. Graduated from college, 3.85 GPA, hold a full time job, live on my own. Completely fine. But I just don't know what I need to disclose... I've been told by some that I don't even need to mention bipolar, since I did not technically have it. Some say say both, bring all the evidence with proving my point... I don't know what to do.
To further compound my fears, I made a dumb mistake about a year ago and went for an FAA 2nd class certificate (Was thinking airlines at the time), and in that process I supplied them with my entire medical history, leading me to a special issuance certificate instead of a normal one (I had to prove to them through a psych that I was fine now) My fear is not mentioning the bipolar misdiagnosis, then it randomly showing up somewhere in my future recruitment process due to it being on record with the FAA.
I really don't know what to do... this situation feels like there is no obvious solution. I have nothing to hide, but I know how bureaucracy can be. I certainly don't want to lie about my past, but how much is saying unnecessary information that will only hurt my chances of getting in? I'm afraid that going in and trying to tell the full story above will just lead to an automatic waiver rejection, as the guys at medical simply don't have the time to care or something. I don't know. Any personal experiences involving this stuff or opinions on what I should or should not do would be really appreciated. I'm not even sure I understand the rules in what I have to disclose, so any clarification of that would be helpful as well.
Thanks guys.
- To clarify, the most recent evaluation I have of myself is the FAA psych, who wrote a huge report (Citing all my other reports from my various doctors) saying that I was entirely fine, and probably had childhood depression related to parent divorce, at the most. This was done last year (age 22). Everything else I have is from when I was 15 or younger.