When news of Britney Spearsâ release from UCLA Medical Center broke, there wasnât immediate cause for panic from some of those close to her. âIâm glad it happened quietly. Hopefully she really is on her way for more treatment,â said one person close to Spears.
And then just hours later, as if she were literally trying to remind the world exactly who is in the driverâs seat, Spears put herself back behind the wheel of a car.
âUnfortunately this isnât uncommon,â said someone with close ties to the same program Spears was in at UCLA. âPatients like Britney go right back to their habits until theyâve hit rock bottom. She obviously hasnât hit rock bottom, despite what it look like from the outside.â
The developments have left many wondering just what happened during her hospital stay, if this is the end result (for a jarring portrait of Spears prior to hospitalization, take a look at Rolling Stoneâs profile of Spears).
According to the UCLA source, Spearsâ days at the facility were spent under close medical observation, where doctors tried to determine whether Spears was responding to medicines and becoming stable, and the staff was going to great lengths to explain her condition to her. Because Spears is an adult, she canât be held there against her will once she is no longer deemed harmful to herself or others.
âObviously everyone whoâs ever had a connection to Britney is worried,â said one person who used to work with Spears. From the sound of it, the worries are far from over.
âIf it turns out that she does have bipolar disorder, sheâll struggle with this illness for the rest of her life,â said Andy Behrman, who chronicled his battle with bipolar disorder in âElectroboy: A Memoir of Mania.â
Behrman also adds that this period of her life, when sheâs trying to get treatment, is among the hardest: âThis is the most painful process and people who are bipolar are not used to being confined after theyâve led their lives at 150 mph.â