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[–]EidlonWon't somebody think of the men?! 21 ポイント22 ポイント  (39子コメント)

Kinda this a lot.

Mental health ableism is a really hard habit to kick, and it's really deeply coded in to our language and thinking. When people say or do things which don't make sense or seem normal to us, we're hard wired to say things like "crazy" or "psychotic," and when talking about GG almost nothing we see seems normal.

But it's a habit worth breaking. Every time you describe someone you don't like with those terms you're reinforcing the idea that being ill = being bad, and you're partially excusing that person's behavior by implying that it's caused by illness and not by, say, them being a jerk.

It's also worth it because you have friends who suffer from mental illness (I'm pretty certain that everyone knows someone who suffers from depression, anxiety, ADHD, or other illnesses, whether we know it or not) and it's not cool to make your friends feel bad about being ill (even if you don't mean to do that).

Edit: Someone posted an article on good alternatives to "crazy," but now I can't find it. Specific language that does not attempt to diagnose is good, and useful, and fun, though. "Entitled shithead." "Callous bully." "Wailing hyper consumer." That sort of thing.