Tag: mental health
-
Neurodivergent has lost all clinical meaning
The word neurodivergent now stretches from autism to introversion. That’s not solidarity — it’s semantic collapse, and it makes real diagnoses harder.
-
The Problem With Labeling Every Condition as a Disease
Medicalizing normal variation expands treatment markets and reshapes identity, but it can also worsen outcomes and obscure structural causes of distress.
-
The autism diagnostic boom is real and complicated
Autism diagnoses have surged for reasons that are partly clinical, partly social, and partly diagnostic creep. Disentangling the trends matters.
-
Sleep, exercise, and sunlight outperform most meds for mild conditions
For mild anxiety, depression, and metabolic issues, the basic levers of sleep, movement, and daylight beat most prescriptions. The evidence and the caveats.
-
Therapy speak is poisoning real relationships
Therapy vocabulary used outside therapy is reframing ordinary friction as pathology. The result is fewer actual conversations and more weaponized labels.
-
The chemical imbalance theory was always a marketing line
The serotonin theory of depression was popularized to sell SSRIs, not because the evidence supported it. The drugs can still help — but the story was never science.
-
Some Diagnoses Stick With You for Life, Even If They’re Wrong
Misdiagnoses can persist in medical records for decades, shaping treatment, insurance, and self-understanding long after the original error has been forgotten.
-
Mental health diagnoses as identity markers is a cultural problem
Diagnostic labels can validate real suffering or harden into identity in ways that limit recovery. Holding both truths matters, and professional support helps navigate it.