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Daily Inspiration Quote by Carrie Fisher

"I'm fine, but I'm bipolar. I'm on seven medications, and I take medication three times a day. This constantly puts me in touch with the illness I have. I'm never quite allowed to be free of that for a day. It's like being a diabetic"

About this Quote

Normalcy is the fantasy Fisher refuses to sell. The line starts with a familiar social script ("I'm fine") and immediately detonates it with the reality underneath: bipolar disorder managed not by willpower or quirky eccentricity, but by a daily industrial schedule of pills. Seven medications, three times a day is intentionally unglamorous math. It turns mental illness from a dramatic plot point into something closer to infrastructure: routines, side effects, constant maintenance.

The subtext is a rebuke to the culture that treats psychiatric conditions as either shameful secrets or edgy personality branding. Fisher frames medication not as a moral failing or a punchline, but as a tether to survival that also denies the luxury of forgetting. "I'm never quite allowed to be free" captures the particular exhaustion of chronic management: even stability is labor, even good days come with reminders.

Her final move - "It's like being a diabetic" - is strategic and deeply political in its plainness. She reaches for an analogy most people accept without moral judgment: diabetes demands treatment; no one confuses insulin with weakness. By linking bipolar disorder to a widely understood medical condition, Fisher pushes against the old split between "real" illness and "mental" illness, and against the expectation that celebrities should either sparkle through pain or keep it offstage.

Context matters: Fisher made a career out of puncturing celebrity mythologies, including her own. Here, the candor is not confession for its own sake; it's normalization with teeth.

Quote Details

TopicMental Health
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Fisher, Carrie. (2026, January 14). I'm fine, but I'm bipolar. I'm on seven medications, and I take medication three times a day. This constantly puts me in touch with the illness I have. I'm never quite allowed to be free of that for a day. It's like being a diabetic. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/im-fine-but-im-bipolar-im-on-seven-medications-140106/

Chicago Style
Fisher, Carrie. "I'm fine, but I'm bipolar. I'm on seven medications, and I take medication three times a day. This constantly puts me in touch with the illness I have. I'm never quite allowed to be free of that for a day. It's like being a diabetic." FixQuotes. January 14, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/im-fine-but-im-bipolar-im-on-seven-medications-140106/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I'm fine, but I'm bipolar. I'm on seven medications, and I take medication three times a day. This constantly puts me in touch with the illness I have. I'm never quite allowed to be free of that for a day. It's like being a diabetic." FixQuotes, 14 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/im-fine-but-im-bipolar-im-on-seven-medications-140106/. Accessed 4 Mar. 2026.

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Carrie Fisher on Bipolar Disorder and Medication
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About the Author

Carrie Fisher

Carrie Fisher (October 21, 1956 - December 27, 2016) was a Actress from USA.

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