I notice that I feel more comfortable writing 'mental health problems' than 'mental illness' because the second option seems so much more loaded. The words we use to talk about mental illness are problematic, too. Anxiety and depression are words that really don't convey the life destroying nature of being overwhelmed by those things.
Years ago, a doctor gave me a questionnaire that talked about being anxious and fearful. I wasn't those things - I was overwhelmed by terror on a daily basis and unable to function as a consequence and I could not express the severity of my situation in the terms the survey offered. I was then given a CBT handbook to help me manage those small fears that will go away if only you push back against them. Only I was terrified, all the time, thanks to the genuinely threatening things that were going on in my life.
Depression, as a term does not convey the state of being so weighted down that you no longer know how to move. It does not express the experience of being so numb that you no longer seem like a proper person on the inside. Depression does not convey the utter despair and hopelessness that sometimes kills people. Talking about the fatigue that comes with depression does not express what it's like to be so overwhelmed that even the idea of trying to do something is unbearably exhausting.
'Triggering' is a word that has been sorely abused by people deliberately minimising how trauma impacts on people. Triggering as a word is not adequate to express the horror and loss of control of finding that your mind has been thrown back into reliving traumatic experiences from your history. The word 'trauma' alone does not do enough to convey to untraumatised people what that kind of experience this means. And I don't want to expand on that because not triggering the traumatised folk is a consideration alongside wanting to educate those who don't really get it.
'Personality disorder' is an awful term that has stigma hard wired into it. It's also a really problematic area of diagnosis - it's just a label, it doesn't represent anything that can be measured. How do you tell between these 'disorders' and perfectly reasonable trauma responses? How do you tell between trauma in undiagnosed neurodivergent adults, and 'personality disorders'? This is an area where the problematic language represents a lot of problematic thinking. If this isn't familiar territory, have a look at the 'symptoms' for schizophrenia https://www.nhs.uk/mental-health/conditions/schizophrenia/symptoms/ and consider how many of those might be caused by trauma and by real threats that are assumed not to exist. What happens to an abused teen whose parents frame their behaviour as delusional?
Often, the official language to describe conditions comes from an unaffected observer, not the people having the experience. This isn't a neutral process, and the stigma against mental illness and neurodivergence is massive and longstanding. And please, if we're going to label murderers as being mentally ill, could we at least have a specific label for that illness rather than making it seem like mentally ill people are dangerous to those around them. We're not. Most of us are far more likely to harm ourselves than anyone else.
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