Mental Health Support
Related: About this forumWho’s Normal Here? An Atypical’s Perspective on Mental Health and Educational Inclusion
Vygotsky resisted the prevalent approach of his dayand oursthat saw children of difference as defective and in need of repair. He instead viewed the question of their condition as one that needed to be addressed in the environment, rather than in the individual. Vygotskys key insight was that a primary disabilitythe condition that is diagnosed, such as blindness (to him) or mental health difference(to me)only becomes problematic when a secondary disability is imposed by other people. This secondary disability emerges from the negative social consequences of the primary disability, that is, the stigmas that people associate with difference and in turn apply such that the person of difference feels rejected and of lesser value. Vygotskys solution was not to fix the child, but to change the context of the childs development so that the point of difference did not produce secondary disabilities and the accompanying feelings of inadequacy that follow from social judgment such as pity or scorn.
http://www.petersmagorinsky.net/About/PDF/EJ/EJ2014.pdf
Tobin S.
(10,420 posts)I have been filling out applications in search of a new job, lately, and a question I usually see on them toward the end asks if I am considered to have a disability. It has a list if of diseases and ailments that are considered disabilities, and my illness, bipolar disorder, is on the list.
They claim in the application that the information is used to make sure that their hiring practices are not discriminatory. However, it seems to me that disclosing such information would only lead to discrimination. Color me jaded, but I really don't see someone using that information as a factor to give me a job.
So I always answer that I do not have a disability. It is not required to disclose that information on the application, and you cannot legally be fired for it if the information later comes to light.
Big Slim
(10 posts)Psychiatry sometimes claims to not believe in normal, but they really do, or at least many of them.
This thread reminds me of an op-ed I just read on a very good site: Mad In America.
http://www.madinamerica.com/2015/07/medical-education-psychiatry-and-reductionism-as-a-first-year-medical-student/