Imaginary friends can be helpful for kids. What about adults?

Hearing voices and imaginary friends in adults
Meet Jenna, who has bipolar disorder, and Jensen, the supportive voice inside her head.
Every spring and fall, Jenna Walker* battled depression  —  a rhythmic, debilitating expression of her type 2 bipolar disorder. She was irritable and unwilling to be around other people, making her job as an administrative assistant untenable. She’d snap if her son touched her shoulder at the wrong moment. Medication didn’t always work.
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